Introduction: The Copper-Binding Tripeptide
GHK-Cu (glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine copper complex) is a naturally occurring tripeptide-copper complex first identified in human plasma in 1973 by Dr. Loren Pickart. It has since become one of the most studied peptides in regenerative biology, with over 100 published research papers documenting its wide-ranging biological activities.
What makes GHK-Cu unique among research peptides is its ability to modulate gene expression at a fundamental level — affecting over 4,000 genes according to Broad Institute gene expression studies.
Molecular Profile
- Full name: Glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine:copper(II) complex
- Sequence: Gly-His-Lys + Cu²?
- Amino acids: 3 (tripeptide)
- Molecular weight: ~403.93 Da (with copper)
- Copper binding: Cu²? chelated by histidine imidazole and peptide backbone
- Natural source: Human plasma, saliva, urine
- Plasma concentration: ~200 ng/mL in young adults, decreasing with age
Mechanism of Action
Copper Delivery and Metalloenzyme Activation
GHK-Cu serves as a biological copper transport molecule. The copper ion is essential for the function of multiple metalloenzymes involved in tissue maintenance:
- Lysyl oxidase — Required for collagen and elastin cross-linking
- Superoxide dismutase (SOD) — Primary antioxidant defense enzyme
- Cytochrome c oxidase — Mitochondrial electron transport
- Tyrosinase — Melanin synthesis
Gene Expression Modulation
GHK-Cu’s most remarkable property is its extensive gene expression modulation. Broad Institute Connectivity Map data shows GHK-Cu affects the expression of approximately 4,000 human genes — roughly 6% of the human genome. Key patterns include:
- Upregulation of collagen synthesis genes (COL1A1, COL3A1)
- Upregulation of antioxidant response genes
- Downregulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, TNF-?)
- Upregulation of DNA repair genes
- Modulation of TGF-? superfamily signaling
- Upregulation of ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (damaged protein clearance)
Research Applications
Dermatology and Skin Biology
GHK-Cu is one of the most extensively studied peptides in skin biology research:
- Collagen I and III synthesis stimulation
- Elastin production and cross-linking
- Glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis — including decorin and hyaluronic acid
- Fibroblast proliferation and migration
- Wound repair signaling cascades
- Anti-photoaging mechanisms
Regenerative Biology
- Stem cell recruitment to injury sites
- Nerve growth factor synthesis
- Angiogenesis promotion
- Bone tissue remodeling (osteoblast stimulation)
- Hair follicle growth cycle research
Anti-Inflammatory Research
- NF-?B pathway modulation
- Pro-inflammatory cytokine suppression
- Oxidative stress reduction via SOD activation
- Iron-related oxidative damage prevention (iron chelation)
Gene Expression and Aging Research
- Age-related gene expression pattern reversal
- DNA damage repair gene upregulation
- Proteasome activity restoration
- Mitochondrial function support via cytochrome c oxidase
GHK-Cu Age-Related Decline
One of the most significant findings in GHK-Cu research is its age-related decline in human plasma:
| Age Range | Approximate GHK-Cu Level |
|---|---|
| 20-25 years | 200 ng/mL |
| 60-80 years | 80 ng/mL |
This 60% decline correlates with reduced tissue repair capacity, decreased collagen synthesis, and increased susceptibility to oxidative damage — making GHK-Cu a focus of aging biology research.
Unique Properties of GHK-Cu
Several features distinguish GHK-Cu from other research peptides:
- Smallest bioactive peptide-metal complex — only 3 amino acids + copper
- Natural human molecule — not a synthetic analog or modified sequence
- Broadest gene modulation — affects more genes than almost any other single molecule studied
- Self-limiting activity — evidence suggests GHK-Cu normalizes rather than overstimulates processes
- Multi-system effects — skin, bone, nerve, immune, and vascular systems
Storage and Handling
- Lyophilized: Store at -20°C, protect from moisture and light
- Reconstituted: 2-8°C, use within 2-3 weeks
- Reconstitution: Bacteriostatic water or sterile water
- Note: Solution will have a characteristic blue color from the copper complex
- Copper stability: Maintain appropriate pH (6.0-7.4) to preserve copper binding
For complete storage protocols, see our Peptide Storage Guide.
Source Research-Grade GHK-Cu
Proxiva Labs supplies GHK-Cu (Copper Peptide) at >99.99% verified purity with proper copper complexation confirmed by third-party analysis. View our certificates of analysis.
Browse our complete research peptide catalog.
Disclaimer: All compounds are intended strictly for laboratory research and in-vitro use only. Not for human consumption.
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