Fasting + Mitophagy
The cellular spring cleaning of damaged mitochondria
Mitophagy is the selective removal of damaged mitochondria — the cellular quality-control process that keeps mitochondrial fleet healthy. Without it, damaged mitochondria accumulate, leak ROS, and drag down energy production. Mitophagy efficiency declines with age and is enhanced by fasting + exercise.
Why prolonged fasts trigger it
Mitophagy ramps up when nutrient sensors (mTOR especially) detect scarcity. Around the 16-hour mark of fasting, mTOR activity drops and AMPK rises — the molecular switch from 'grow' to 'recycle.' Longer fasts deepen the effect. 24-hour quarterly fasts produce robust mitophagy without much downside for healthy adults.
Exercise enhances it independently
Both endurance and resistance exercise activate mitophagy via independent pathways from fasting. The combination — fasted training, especially Zone 2 in a fasted state — produces stronger mitophagy signals than either alone. Common practice: morning Zone 2 ride before breakfast.
Rank by mitophagy stimulus strength
From strongest to mildest mitophagy signal.
This step is interactive — open the Thier app to try it.
Don't fast if you're already lean + active
Aggressive fasting in young + lean + heavily-training individuals is counterproductive. Mitophagy benefits diminish at lower body fat, while muscle catabolism risks rise. Fasting hits diminishing returns past 16:8 if you're already metabolically healthy. Listen to your training response, not the social-media protocols.
Key Takeaway
Fasting drives mitophagy — the cellular removal of damaged mitochondria. Prolonged fasts (24+ hours) have the strongest signal but aren't always wise. 16:8 daily windows + occasional fasted training cover most of the benefit for most people. Don't over-engineer it.