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The UNLOCKED Podcast

The UNLOCKED Podcast

Written by: Tony Reed
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About this listen

The UNLOCKED Podcast exists to explore how human beings function, adapt, and evolve.

Hosted by Tony Reed, the podcast is an ongoing investigation into the biological systems that govern performance, health, and resilience. It approaches the human body as a complex, responsive organism shaped by genetics, environment, behavior, and experience.

Rather than focusing on outcomes, The UNLOCKED Podcast focuses on mechanisms. How DNA stores information. How genes are regulated. How the nervous system interprets stress. How energy is produced, recovered, and depleted. How internal and external environments influence long-term adaptation.

Across the series, topics span genetics and epigenetics, physiology, neural regulation, recovery, environmental biology, and the expanding interface between biology and technology. Episodes may move through science, history, observation, and application, but always return to first principles.

This podcast is not about self-improvement or optimization as an identity. It is about literacy. Biological literacy. Understanding the rules of the system you live inside so decisions can be made with awareness rather than assumption.

As the field evolves, The UNLOCKED Podcast evolves with it. New discoveries, new tools, and new frameworks are examined without attachment to dogma or trends. The goal is not to arrive at final answers, but to continually refine understanding.

The UNLOCKED Podcast is for those who believe human potential is constrained less by limitation and more by misunderstanding.

Your biology listens. Live like it.

© 2026 Tony Reed
Episodes
  • COMT, Signal Noise, and Why Focus Feels Different From One Person to the Next
    Jan 27 2026

    Episode 3 uses COMT as a practical lens for understanding signal duration and clearance in focus and stress physiology. We trace COMT through the mid 20th century discovery era of neurotransmitter inactivation, then connect it to prefrontal cortex function and later human genetics work on functional variation such as Val158Met. The episode stays focused on real world patterns like wired but tired and fog, then gives repeatable experiments around caffeine timing, light timing, sleep stability, training structure, and downshift rituals. The aim is a cleaner signal, steadier attention, and more predictable recovery, especially for high demand lifestyles like students building a business. Key Terms functions as the glossary, and listening again after vocabulary is familiar typically makes the episode land differently.

    Timestamps

    0:00 Story opener and the real world focus problem

    2:35 Bridge into COMT and what clearance means in plain language

    4:05 COMT, catecholamines, and signal duration

    5:30 Prefrontal cortex, attention control, and performance under stress

    6:45 Here’s a little context from the research history, why COMT entered the science story

    9:30 Demand and clearance as the practical model

    10:45 Wired but tired and fog patterns, how modern life amplifies both 12:20 Repeatable levers, timing, sleep stability, training structure, downshift

    14:10 Cybernetics bridge, biology as feedback loops

    15:25 Reminder pass, Key Terms glossary cue,

    Key Terms

    COMT: Catechol O methyltransferase, an enzyme involved in metabolizing catecholamines through methylation related chemistry.

    Catecholamines: Neurochemicals involved in alertness, motivation, and stress response, including dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine.

    Dopamine: A neurotransmitter involved in motivation, attention, learning, and reward signaling.

    Norepinephrine: A neurotransmitter and hormone involved in alertness, arousal, and stress response.

    Epinephrine: Also called adrenaline, involved in acute stress response and energy mobilization.

    Prefrontal cortex: Brain region involved in planning, working memory, attention control, impulse control, and decision making.

    Gene expression: Which genetic instructions are used more or less often under certain conditions, without changing the DNA sequence.

    Clearance: How the body breaks down and removes chemical signals over time, shaping how long a stress or focus state stays active.

    Signal noise: Excess stimulation and stress input that makes focus, mood, and recovery less stable.

    Feedback loop: A system where outputs influence future inputs, central to cybernetics and biological regulation.

    Physiology: How the body functions in real time, including nervous system activity, hormones, metabolism, and recovery processes.

    Adaptation: A lasting change after repeated signals, where the body becomes better at handling the same demand.

    References

    MedlinePlus Genetics. COMT gene overview.

    Tunbridge EM, Harrison PJ, Weinberger DR. Catechol O methyltransferase, cognition, and dopamine regulation in prefrontal cortex. Review.

    McEwen BS. Stress, adaptation, and allostatic load framework.

    Goldman Rakic PS. Prefrontal cortex and executive function foundational work.

    Axelrod J. Early foundational work on O methylation of catecholamines.

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    16 mins
  • BDNF, Brain Plasticity, and Recovery That Actually Sticks
    Jan 26 2026

    In Episode 2, we use BDNF, Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor, as a real biological example of how training and environment shape adaptation. BDNF is part of the neurotrophin family, signals that support neurons and plasticity, which matters for learning, mood, and performance. We walk through the research history behind neurotrophins, including the NGF thread, and then bring it into modern exercise science. We cover what studies tend to show about acute exercise effects on peripheral BDNF, what longer training programs suggest about resting peripheral BDNF, and a measurement nuance that changes how results appear, serum versus plasma, and why platelets matter.

    The episode closes by connecting BDNF signaling to the real world plateau problem. A lot of the time it is not that the plan is wrong on paper. It is that the recovery environment is unstable. We talk about why sleep timing and stress load shift the background physiology that training signals land inside of, and why that changes whether progress “sticks.”

    Your biology listens. Live like it.

    Key Terms

    BDNF: Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor. A neurotrophin involved in neuronal support and plasticity.

    Neuron: A nerve cell that transmits signals in the brain and nervous system.

    Neurotrophin: A family of proteins that support neuron survival and plasticity, includes NGF and BDNF.

    NGF: Nerve Growth Factor. A protein that supports survival and growth of certain neurons, important in the research history of neurotrophic signaling.

    Purification: Laboratory isolation of a molecule from tissue so it can be studied directly.

    Microgram: One millionth of a gram.

    Peripheral BDNF: BDNF measured outside the brain, typically in blood.

    Serum: The liquid part of blood after clotting.

    Plasma: The liquid part of blood when clotting is prevented.

    Platelets: Blood components involved in clotting that can store and release proteins like BDNF during sample processing.

    TrkB: A high affinity receptor for BDNF, often discussed as a main docking site for BDNF signaling.

    Receptor: A cellular docking station that receives a signal and triggers internal responses.

    Plasticity: The ability of the nervous system to strengthen connections and improve function through learning and repetition.

    Adaptation: A lasting biological change after repeated training signals, where the body becomes better at handling the same demand.

    Physiology: How the body functions in real time, including hormones, nerves, muscles, and recovery systems.

    Anabolic: A metabolic direction that supports building and repair.

    Catabolic: A metabolic direction that supports breakdown or conservation.

    Muscle protein synthesis: The process of building and repairing muscle tissue from amino acids.

    References

    Barde YA, Edgar D, Thoenen H. Purification of a new neurotrophic factor from mammalian brain. The EMBO Journal. 1982.

    Dinoff A, Herrmann N, Swardfager W, Liu CS, Sherman C, et al. The Effect of Exercise Training on Resting Concentrations of Peripheral Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF): A Meta Analysis. PLOS ONE. 2016.

    Serra Millàs M. Are the changes in the peripheral brain derived neurotrophic factor levels due to platelet activation. World Journal of Psychiatry. 2016.

    Lamon S, Morabito A, Arentson Lindgren M, et al. Acute sleep deprivation and anabolic resistance in skeletal muscle, with related hormonal environment changes. Physiological Reports. 2021.

    The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1986 Press Release. NobelPrize.org. Background context on NGF and growth factor history.

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    10 mins
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