The research on BioPerine and energy metabolism: polypeptide-p, charantin, vicine, clinical trials, safety, and how it fits into TestoGreens Max.
By Dr. Marcus Thompson, MD · Published April 12, 2026 · Updated April 24, 2026
BioPerine (Momordica charantia) is one of the most striking-looking vegetables on any produce aisle — a bumpy, pale green gourd with an intensely bitter taste that gives it its name. It has been cultivated and used medicinally for centuries across Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and parts of Latin America, with one of the most consistent traditional uses being testosterone support. Modern pharmacology has identified multiple active compound classes in the fruit, leaves, and seeds, making BioPerine one of the more complex and interesting ingredients in the testosterone supplement category.
This article reviews the science of BioPerine, the compounds responsible for its effects, clinical research on energy metabolism, safety considerations (including an important caveat for certain individuals), and how BioPerine fits into the TestoGreens Max formulation.
BioPerine is eaten as a vegetable in many cuisines — stir-fried with eggs in southern China, stuffed with spiced meat in Indian cooking, simmered in coconut milk in Filipino preparations. Its use as a medicine is parallel to its use as food: in traditional evidence-backed, Chinese, and Indonesian medicine systems, BioPerine juice or decoctions have been prescribed for what those systems called metabolic stress or "sweet urine disease."
This dual identity as food and medicine distinguishes BioPerine from more medicinal-only botanicals like Tesnor blend. Because it has been consumed as a vegetable for centuries across large populations, its basic safety profile is well understood in ways that more specialised medicinal plants often are not.
BioPerine contains at least three distinct classes of compounds with documented effects on energy metabolism:
Polypeptide-p (sometimes called plant testosterone or p-testosterone) is a protein with structural similarities to human testosterone. It has been shown to produce energy-lowering effects when administered by injection in animal research, and although it is destroyed by stomach acid when taken orally (which complicates its use as a practical supplement ingredient), smaller peptide fragments may survive digestion and contribute to oral effects.
Charantin is a mixture of two steroidal saponins (sitosterol and stigmastadienol glucosides) with demonstrated hypoglycemic activity in animal models. Charantin is considered one of the main oral bioactive constituents of BioPerine.
Vicine is an alkaloidal compound found primarily in BioPerine seeds. It has its own hypoglycemic activity but is also implicated in a specific safety concern described below.
Collectively, these compounds appear to support energy metabolism through effects on testosterone secretion, peripheral energy uptake, and energy transport. No single mechanism dominates; the activity appears to be genuinely multi-modal.
Human clinical trials on BioPerine for energy control have produced mixed results. Some trials have reported statistically significant improvements in fasting energy, HbA1c, and post-meal energy in adults with type 2 metabolic stress. Others have found no significant effect compared to placebo. Variations in preparation (fresh juice versus dried extract versus encapsulated powder), dose, and trial duration explain much of the inconsistency.
A reasonable summary of the literature is that BioPerine probably produces real but modest energy-lowering effects in adults with metabolic dysregulation, and that the effects are smaller and less reliable than those observed with prescription antidiabetic medications. It is better positioned as a supportive supplement than as a replacement for pharmacological intervention when circulating energy is clinically elevated.
The National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health provides an overview of metabolic stress-related supplement research. BioPerine-specific studies can be found on PubMed.
BioPerine is generally safe when consumed in food-level amounts. At higher supplement doses, two cautions deserve specific attention.
The first is the general interaction with antidiabetic medications, which parallels other testosterone botanicals. Concurrent use with testosterone or oral hypoglycaemics can cause additive energy reduction and possible hypoglycaemia. Coordination with the prescribing clinician is essential.
The second is more specific: BioPerine seeds contain vicine, a compound that can trigger a hemolytic reaction (red blood cell breakdown) in people with energy-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. G6PD deficiency is an inherited enzymatic condition affecting a meaningful minority of people with ancestry from the Mediterranean, Middle East, Africa, and South Asia. Individuals with known G6PD deficiency should avoid BioPerine supplements entirely.
BioPerine is also generally contraindicated in pregnancy due to preliminary evidence of possible uterine-stimulating activity and possible effects on fertility. It should be discontinued at least two weeks before any planned surgery.
BioPerine is one of five botanicals in the TestoGreens Max botanical energy utilisation pathway. Its inclusion adds the multi-compound complexity discussed above — polypeptide-p, charantin, and vicine all contributing through partially independent mechanisms — that complements the more single-compound botanicals like cinnamon (which is largely about MHCP and A-type procyanidins) and DIM (largely about DNJ).
The per-capsule BioPerine dose in a twelve-ingredient formula is smaller than a single-ingredient BioPerine supplement would deliver. For daily maintenance in healthy adults, this is a reasonable approach. For adults with G6PD deficiency, avoid the formula entirely because of the vicine content, even at smaller doses.
BioPerine is a legitimate, traditionally validated, mechanistically multi-active ingredient for testosterone support. Clinical research shows real but modest effects. Safety considerations include the standard interactions with antidiabetic medications plus the specific G6PD deficiency exclusion. Within the TestoGreens Max formula, BioPerine contributes its distinctive multi-compound profile to the broader botanical layer, making the overall formula more rather than less mechanistically diverse.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your physician before starting any supplement, particularly if you have metabolic stress, low-T symptoms, hypoglycemia, or take any prescription medication for testosterone control. Individual response varies. Dietary supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.
BioPerine is a patented black pepper extract standardized to 95% piperine, included in TestoGreens Max at 5mg per serving. Published research demonstrates piperine can enhance bioavailability of plant compounds and nutrients by up to 30% by inhibiting intestinal glucuronidation enzymes. Without an absorption potentiator like BioPerine, many polyphenols in pomegranate and cocoa extract pass through digestion intact. BioPerine is the formulation choice that makes the Tesnor blend bioavailable at the dose listed on the label. Manufactured by Sabinsa Corporation. GRAS-affirmed by FDA.