Join 65,000+ Looksmaxxing Members!

Register a FREE account today to become a member. Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox.

  • DISCLAIMER: DO NOT ATTEMPT TREATMENT WITHOUT LICENCED MEDICAL CONSULTATION AND SUPERVISION

    This is a public discussion forum. The owners, staff, and users of this website ARE NOT engaged in rendering professional services to the individual reader. DO NOT use the content of this website as an alternative to personal examination and advice from licenced healthcare providers. DO NOT begin, delay, or discontinue treatments and/or exercises without licenced medical supervision. Learn more

Guide GHK-Cu - A Deep Dive

emeraldpill

they slandered my name
Contributor
Reputable ★★★
Joined
Jul 21, 2025
Messages
9,174
Solutions
9
Time Online
25d 21h
Reputation
25,934
Location
prison
.·*´¯`*·.¸¸*·.·.·.@Cynic*¸¸.·*´¯`*·.

Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. This is not medical advice and is purely educational content set in a hypothetical scenario. I do not take responsibility for any information found in this guide or any replies. Proceed at your own risk.


This is the first of a series of threads dedicated to peptides that have become increasingly popular. In particular with the rise in popularity of BP/LM on tiktok and other social media in recent years.

Please note this guide covers both topical and injectable GHK-Cu. I have labelled this in most instances but there is bound to be some where you will use the context to decide.
If this is your first time using peptides, please see my thread on safely storing and administering before you continue:






GHK is the abbreviation for Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine, a tripeptide (three amino acids (Glycine, Histidine, Lysine) linked together) that naturally occurs in human plasma, saliva and urine. It was first discovered/isolated from plasma in 1973 (Dr. Loren Pickart).

This discovery came specifically from observing human albumin causing old human liver tissue to synthesise proteins more efficiently - as younger tissue would. This led to masses of research into the regenerative properties of GHK, as we will discuss later.

It is primarily found in blood plasma (200ng/mL at age 20) and at lower/trace amounts in saliva and urine.

As you age, GHK levels decline massively - at age 60, concentration in plasma drops to around 80ng/mL. This decline is likely not coincidental with significant decrease in the body's regenerative ability.

GHK exists in T1 collagen and the protein SPARC. Proteolytic enzymes - a oart of your immune defence - release GHK as part of the healing response to tissue injury.

Copper is of course a transition metal element, essential in trace amounts for vital bodily functions; collagen production, antioxidant defence, metabolising iron, energy production, well functioning nervous system and angiogenesis.

GHK has a very high affinity for copper(ii) ions, allowing GHK to systemically transport directly to cells. This, in theory, should have positive effects on the above functions when dosed correctly

GHK binds to copper(ii) ions to form the GHK-Cu complex. This creates the bright blue colour, a more stable complex, and better bioavailability.

These are the primary benefits that people use GHK-Cu for - there are many others that may exist which i have gone much more in depth on under mechanisms of action. i didnt include many of them here because research is more limited and pathways are more complex. Please read the entirety of mechanisms of action for an in depth look at all effects of GHK-Cu. It is quite long, but well worth the read in my opinion, as well as independent research.

Skincare and Anti-aging
- increases collagen production up to 70%
- reduces wrinkle volume by up to 56%
- enhances elastin production
- enhanced tissue remodelling/repair


Wound Healing
- 30-50% faster healing of tissue
- potentially reduced scarring
- reduced inflammation

Hair Growth
- increases follicle size
- comparable efficiency to 5% minoxidil in some cases

GHK-Cu has a variety of complex and synergistic mechanisms of action at both cellular and molecular levels. I've separated these into how each benefit listed above may come about:

direct fibroblast activation:
- GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblasts to increase production of mRNA for collagen synthesis
- upregulates type I and type III collagen genes
- selectively stimulates collagen synthesis at concentrations as low as 0.01-1 nM without affecting non collagen protein synthesis

TGF-β pathway modulation
- GHK-Cu activates the TGF-β pathway, the primary regulator of collagen production
- GHK-Cu restored TGF-β activity to normal levels in COPD patients
- locally REDUCES TGF-β secretion during wound healing in order to prevent scarring


copper as an enzyme cofactor

- copper(ii) ion in GHK-Cu acts as a cofactor for enzymes lysyl oxidase and lysyl hydroxylase
- these enzymes create links between collagen fibres aiding in stability and strength
- lysyl oxidase creates the cross links that give skin tensile strength
- one of the primary reasons GHK-Cu is so much more effective than GHK alone


miscellaneous support
- increases production of decorin - proteoglycan that regulates organisation of collagen fibrils
- stimulates production of glycoaminoglycan which gives skin volume and aids in a hydrated look

one of my favourite mechanisms of this compound:

MMPs are enzymes that break down collagen and other ECM proteins. they are improtant in the role of tissue remodelling - they remove old and/or damaged collagen. of course this means too much MMP activity can lead to accelerated aging and skin damage.

GHK-Cu simultaneously stimulates MMPs when required for collagen/scar tissue removal and increases TIMPs (MMP inhibitors) to prevent excessive breakdown as described above.

in damaged skin, GHK-Cu increases MMPs to clear damaged proteins, while in healthy skin it increases TIMPs to protect these very same proteins while they are healthy
its almost like an intelligent tissue remodelling system

phase 1 - inflammation/hemostasis:

chemoattraction:
GHK-Cu acts as a potent chemoattractant for immune cells by attracting mast cells and macrophages to the wound site, releasing growth factors and cytokines that initiate healing

anti-inflammatory regulation:
- reduces inflammatory cytokines:
TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α)
IL-6 (interleukin-6)
- activates NFκB pathway suppression - NFκB is an inflammatory regulator
- prevents chronic inflammation without hindering immune response

phase 2 - proliferation:

angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation):
- upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) gene expression
- stimulates bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) production
- new capillaries bring oxygen and nutrients to tissue

fibroblast proliferation:
- increases fibroblast migration and proliferation at tissue site
- increases production of ECM proteins
- improves integrin β1 expression (integrins are proteins that anchor cells to the ECM)

keratinocyte migration:
- promotes re-epithelialization
- peratinocytes migrate across the wound bed to close the gap

phase 3 - remodeling:

anti-fibrotic action:
REDUCES TGF-β1 during this phase to prevent excessive scarring
promotes organized collagen deposition rather than random scar tissue formation
downregulates pro-fibrotic genes

Sscar tissue removal:
stimulates MMP production to break down disorganized scar collagen and replace it with organised
this is why GHK-Cu treated wounds have better cosmetic outcomes

special case - diabetic wounds:

in diabetics, GHK-Cu increased GSH and ascorbic acid levels at wound sites
40% increase in wound closure and 27% decrease in infection in clinical trials

follicle size increase:

GHK-Cu increases hair follicle size by stimulating cell proliferation in the follicle bulb, leading to thicker hairs. this was documented in vitro with dermal papilla cells

anagen phase extension:

the hair growth cycle has three phases: anagen, catagen, telogen
GHK-Cu extends the anagen phase, keeping hair in active growth longer

Scalp Circulation:

promoting angiogenesis (via VEGF), GHK-Cu increases blood flow to the scalp, increasing level of oxygen and nutrients to cells, supporting metabolic demands

Anti-Inflammatory Effects:

reduces scalp inflammation that can damage follicles, and suppresses TNF-α and IL-6, which are elevated in androgenetic alopecia. these combine to create a healthier overall environment for follicles

Growth Factor Stimulation:

increases production of growth factors that support follicle health
- IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) and FGF-7 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 7)
note; the interactions here are complicated and i still haven't researched enough to fully understand it, but it seems to regulate IGF-1 among other growth factors in a way similar to MMP regulation - using 'context' to either increase or decrease levels depending on the situation. this is also true for a few other interactions

Mechanism vs Minoxidil:

minoxidil primarily works by opening potassium channels and increasing blood flow
GHK-Cu works through growth factor upregulation, gene expression modulation, and structural support
they are fundamentally different mechanisms hence why some people respond better or simply differently to each

the connectivity map discovery:

using the Broad Institute's connectivity map, GHK-Cu's effects on gene expression were analysed, finding that GHK-Cu modulates approximately 4,000 genes (31.2% of the tested human genome). a common view is that it works as a sort of reset, allowing aged cells to revert back to a younger expression profile

genes upregulated:

- DNA repair genes (47): aids in fixing accumulated dna damage
- antioxidant enzyme genes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione-related enzymes
- tissue repair genes: collagen, elastin, decorin, ECM proteins
- growth factor genes: VEGF, TGF-β, PDGF, FGF family
- stem cell activation genes: promotes stem cell differentiation toward repair

genes downregulated:

- inflammatory genes: TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, NFκB pathway components
- fibrotic genes: excessive TGF-β1, scarring factors
- fibrinogen synthesis genes: reduces clotting pathway overactivation
- cancer-associated genes: including some involved in metastasis (particularly metastatic colon cancer)

epigenetic effects:

GHK-Cu works through epigenetic modulation as opposed to full on genetic mutation. this allows for reversible and more readily targeted effects - like turning a gene up or down rather than changing it completely

clinical validation - COPD study:
In emphysema patients, gene expression profiles were severely altered
GHK-Cu reversed these changes, particularly in the TGF-β pathway
Genes involved in tissue repair were upregulated, inflammatory genes downregulated
This validated the Connectivity Map predictions in actual diseased tissue
Result: Cellular "rejuvenation" at the genetic level—the cell behaves younger.

superoxide dismutase (SOD):

GHK-Cu has SOD-mimetic activity, meaning it acts like the enzyme superoxide dismutase. it converts superoxide radicals (O₂⁻) into hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂). on a molar basis, GHK-Cu has between 1 and 3% of the activity of native Cu-Zn SOD enzyme, so it clearly isn't going to have ridiculous effects in this area, but a notable benefit albeit a marginal one

catalase:

GHK-Cu increases expression of catalase which breaks down H₂O₂ into water and oxygen, completing the antioxidant pathway: O₂⁻ → H₂O₂ → H₂O + O₂. this protects against both superoxide and peroxide damage

glutathione system:

upregulates (GSH) levels, the body's primary antioxidant important for neutralizing a wide range of free radicals and reactives.
this is significant in diabetic wounds with high oxidative stress, as described in the earlier section on this

NFκB pathway inhibition:

GHK-Cu inhibits activation of NFκB p65 which is a transcription factor driving inflammation
- reduces expression of cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
NFκB activation is also correlated with aging and cancer development - more on this later

p38 MAPK Modulation:

- blocks activation of p38 MAPK (mitogen activated protein kinase)
- responds to stress and triggers inflammatory responses leading to less cellular stress caused by inflammation

Copper Regulation:

GHK-Cu chelates copper, preventing free copper from participating in fenton reactions
- free copper can catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals
copper bound in the GHK-Cu complex is "safe" and bioavailable without toxicity - more later

VEGF upregulation:

GHK-Cu increases expression of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)
- VEGF is the primary regulator of blood vessel formation, signalling endothelial cells to proliferate and migrate

bFGF stimulation:

increases basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) production and works with VEGF to promote angiogenesis
- also has anti-apoptotic effects (prevents cell death) in endothelial cells

endothelial cell migration:

GHK-Cu acts as a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, promoting their migration toward areas needing vascularisation. this increases expression of cell adhesion molecules needed for vessel formation

clinical significance:
In wound healing: New blood vessels bring oxygen and nutrients to healing tissue
In ischemic conditions: Can help restore blood flow to oxygen-deprived areas
In skin: Better circulation = healthier, more vibrant appearance
Result: Improved tissue oxygenation, nutrient delivery, waste removal.



nerve growth factor (NGF) production:

GHK-Cu stimulates production of NGF and some other neurotrophic factors, supporting neuron survival and function. this improves nerve recovery and regrowth after injury and potentially improves formation of new nerve cells/synapses, improving cognition
axon regeneration:

increases migration of hematogenous cells into nerve repair sites
promotes growth of myelinated nerve fibers, which carry signals much faster (potentially orders of magnituted faster)
increases schwann cell count - these create the myelin sheath around the axon of nerve cells in the peripheral nervous system allowing for saltatory conduction

integrin expression:

upregulates integrins that help neurones bind and navigate extracellular matrix

gene expression effects:

modulates genes related to nervous system function
- anti-anxiety effects demonstrated in animal models

DISCLAIMER: this is preliminary research and should not be relied upon. education and hypothetical only.


metastasis gene downregulation:


gene expression signatures in metastatic colon cancer showed GHK-Cu downregulates pro-metastatic genes, reducing expression of genes associated with cancer spread and invasion - this is particularly effective against genes with the metastasis-prone signature

anti-proliferative effects:

GHK-Cu showed anti-tumor activity in sarcoma-180 tumour models, more so when combined with vitamin C. current theory suggests this may work by modulating copper availability in tumour cells

NFκB suppression:

GHK-Cu may also have some role in cancer prevention by inhibitng NFκB activation

uncertainty:

exact anti-cancer mechanisms are not fully understood
as i said earlier, this is preliminary and under-researched

stem cell mobilization:

- promotes differentiation of stem cells towards repair phenotypes
- increases expression of genes related to stem cell activation
- may help maintain stem cell populations as you age

cellular senescence reduction:

modulates pathways associated with cellular senescence, helping to clear senescent cells or prevent their accumulation in a similar way to MMPs like earlier. senescent cells produce inflammatory factors (SASP) that accelerate aging so it is obviously beneficial to reduce this as much as possible

replicative vitality:

GHK-Cu restores replicative capacity to fibroblasts damaged by radiation, suggesting it can reverse some forms of cellular damage
TGF-β activation​
fibroblast signaling​
increased collagen production​
Lysyl oxidase cofactor​
collagen cross linking​
skin strength​
MMP/TIMP balance​
ECM remodeling​
tissue renewal​
VEGF upregulation​
endothelial cells​
angiogenesis​
NFκB inhibition​
inflammation and related effects​
decreased chronic inflammation​
SOD-mimetic activity​
free radical scavenging​
antioxidant protection​
Gene expression modulation​
4k+ genes​
potentially innumerable​
Chemoattractant action​
immune cell recruitment​
wound healing​
Integrin expression​
cell to ECM adhesion​
cell migration​
Growth factor stimulation​
VEGF, FGF, TGF-β, etc.​
healing​








- overall very safe peptide without any serious side effects
- lethal dose is hundreds of times larger than what you'd be taking

side effects include:

topical: irritation
injectable: pain and bruisong locally at injection site, nausea, dizziness

all temporary and minor

topical is fda approved, injectable is not and experimental


Factor​
Topical​
Subq injection​
bioavailability​
low​
high - 10-20x topical​
speed​
8 weeks for significant benefits​
4 weeks​
systemic​
no​
yes​
cost​
low​
moderate​
convenience​
very high​
moderate​
pain​
none​
low​
skill​
none​
moderate - see my guide​
storage​
none​
fridge​
honestly just inject, not much else to it





what to look for:
COAs
high purity
<1 EU/mg endotoxin
heavy metal testing
cold pack shipping, especially if not lyophilised

what to be careful of:

low prices vs. alternatives
no COA
COA that doesnt match batch
no contact info
bad packaging
unrealistic claims

i havent decided yet whether im going to include peptide synergies here or make another thread dedicated to them, so blank for now

i have a draft of this section so if you are very interested in anything specific let me know

1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.




If you feel I have missed anything out, please let me know and I will include it.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated, and if there is anything you would like to see guides on - be it a different peptide or something unrelated - let me know.

Apologies also if the formatting is a bit inconsistent throughout, this took a while so i did some on my phone and some on computer.

I removed the section on dosages, please PM if you are unsure about this. I decided against instructing people dosages to use publicly.

Thanks, Cynic


@Nephilim
@Blackpillirony
@gameofb0nes
short tag list for now :peeposhy:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Register to hide this ad
formatting is so messed up i have no idea why
 
I wonder if this peptide would help since I’m on blood thinners for life. I heal wounds sooo slow
would be worth looking into but check interactions with your meds
 
1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.
Good thread but bffr you didn't read majority of these things
 
.·*´¯`*·.¸¸*·.·.·.@Cynic*¸¸.·*´¯`*·.

Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. This is not medical advice and is purely educational content set in a hypothetical scenario. I do not take responsibility for any information found in this guide or any replies. Proceed at your own risk.


This is the first of a series of threads dedicated to peptides that have become increasingly popular. In particular with the rise in popularity of BP/LM on tiktok and other social media in recent years.

Please note this guide covers both topical and injectable GHK-Cu. I have labelled this in most instances but there is bound to be some where you will use the context to decide.
If this is your first time using peptides, please see my thread on safely storing and administering before you continue:






GHK is the abbreviation for Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine, a tripeptide (three amino acids (Glycine, Histidine, Lysine) linked together) that naturally occurs in human plasma, saliva and urine. It was first discovered/isolated from plasma in 1973 (Dr. Loren Pickart).

This discovery came specifically from observing human albumin causing old human liver tissue to synthesise proteins more efficiently - as younger tissue would. This led to masses of research into the regenerative properties of GHK, as we will discuss later.

It is primarily found in blood plasma (200ng/mL at age 20) and at lower/trace amounts in saliva and urine.

As you age, GHK levels decline massively - at age 60, concentration in plasma drops to around 80ng/mL. This decline is likely not coincidental with significant decrease in the body's regenerative ability.

GHK exists in T1 collagen and the protein SPARC. Proteolytic enzymes - a oart of your immune defence - release GHK as part of the healing response to tissue injury.

Copper is of course a transition metal element, essential in trace amounts for vital bodily functions; collagen production, antioxidant defence, metabolising iron, energy production, well functioning nervous system and angiogenesis.

GHK has a very high affinity for copper(ii) ions, allowing GHK to systemically transport directly to cells. This, in theory, should have positive effects on the above functions when dosed correctly

GHK binds to copper(ii) ions to form the GHK-Cu complex. This creates the bright blue colour, a more stable complex, and better bioavailability.

These are the primary benefits that people use GHK-Cu for - there are many others that may exist which i have gone much more in depth on under mechanisms of action. i didnt include many of them here because research is more limited and pathways are more complex. Please read the entirety of mechanisms of action for an in depth look at all effects of GHK-Cu. It is quite long, but well worth the read in my opinion, as well as independent research.

Skincare and Anti-aging
- increases collagen production up to 70%
- reduces wrinkle volume by up to 56%
- enhances elastin production
- enhanced tissue remodelling/repair


Wound Healing
- 30-50% faster healing of tissue
- potentially reduced scarring
- reduced inflammation

Hair Growth
- increases follicle size
- comparable efficiency to 5% minoxidil in some cases

GHK-Cu has a variety of complex and synergistic mechanisms of action at both cellular and molecular levels. I've separated these into how each benefit listed above may come about:

direct fibroblast activation:
- GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblasts to increase production of mRNA for collagen synthesis
- upregulates type I and type III collagen genes
- selectively stimulates collagen synthesis at concentrations as low as 0.01-1 nM without affecting non collagen protein synthesis

TGF-β pathway modulation
- GHK-Cu activates the TGF-β pathway, the primary regulator of collagen production
- GHK-Cu restored TGF-β activity to normal levels in COPD patients
- locally REDUCES TGF-β secretion during wound healing in order to prevent scarring


copper as an enzyme cofactor

- copper(ii) ion in GHK-Cu acts as a cofactor for enzymes lysyl oxidase and lysyl hydroxylase
- these enzymes create links between collagen fibres aiding in stability and strength
- lysyl oxidase creates the cross links that give skin tensile strength
- one of the primary reasons GHK-Cu is so much more effective than GHK alone


miscellaneous support
- increases production of decorin - proteoglycan that regulates organisation of collagen fibrils
- stimulates production of glycoaminoglycan which gives skin volume and aids in a hydrated look

one of my favourite mechanisms of this compound:

MMPs are enzymes that break down collagen and other ECM proteins. they are improtant in the role of tissue remodelling - they remove old and/or damaged collagen. of course this means too much MMP activity can lead to accelerated aging and skin damage.

GHK-Cu simultaneously stimulates MMPs when required for collagen/scar tissue removal and increases TIMPs (MMP inhibitors) to prevent excessive breakdown as described above.

in damaged skin, GHK-Cu increases MMPs to clear damaged proteins, while in healthy skin it increases TIMPs to protect these very same proteins while they are healthy
its almost like an intelligent tissue remodelling system

phase 1 - inflammation/hemostasis:

chemoattraction:
GHK-Cu acts as a potent chemoattractant for immune cells by attracting mast cells and macrophages to the wound site, releasing growth factors and cytokines that initiate healing

anti-inflammatory regulation:
- reduces inflammatory cytokines:
TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α)
IL-6 (interleukin-6)
- activates NFκB pathway suppression - NFκB is an inflammatory regulator
- prevents chronic inflammation without hindering immune response

phase 2 - proliferation:

angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation):
- upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) gene expression
- stimulates bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) production
- new capillaries bring oxygen and nutrients to tissue

fibroblast proliferation:
- increases fibroblast migration and proliferation at tissue site
- increases production of ECM proteins
- improves integrin β1 expression (integrins are proteins that anchor cells to the ECM)

keratinocyte migration:
- promotes re-epithelialization
- peratinocytes migrate across the wound bed to close the gap

phase 3 - remodeling:

anti-fibrotic action:
REDUCES TGF-β1 during this phase to prevent excessive scarring
promotes organized collagen deposition rather than random scar tissue formation
downregulates pro-fibrotic genes

Sscar tissue removal:
stimulates MMP production to break down disorganized scar collagen and replace it with organised
this is why GHK-Cu treated wounds have better cosmetic outcomes

special case - diabetic wounds:

in diabetics, GHK-Cu increased GSH and ascorbic acid levels at wound sites
40% increase in wound closure and 27% decrease in infection in clinical trials

follicle size increase:

GHK-Cu increases hair follicle size by stimulating cell proliferation in the follicle bulb, leading to thicker hairs. this was documented in vitro with dermal papilla cells

anagen phase extension:

the hair growth cycle has three phases: anagen, catagen, telogen
GHK-Cu extends the anagen phase, keeping hair in active growth longer

Scalp Circulation:

promoting angiogenesis (via VEGF), GHK-Cu increases blood flow to the scalp, increasing level of oxygen and nutrients to cells, supporting metabolic demands

Anti-Inflammatory Effects:

reduces scalp inflammation that can damage follicles, and suppresses TNF-α and IL-6, which are elevated in androgenetic alopecia. these combine to create a healthier overall environment for follicles

Growth Factor Stimulation:

increases production of growth factors that support follicle health
- IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) and FGF-7 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 7)
note; the interactions here are complicated and i still haven't researched enough to fully understand it, but it seems to regulate IGF-1 among other growth factors in a way similar to MMP regulation - using 'context' to either increase or decrease levels depending on the situation. this is also true for a few other interactions

Mechanism vs Minoxidil:

minoxidil primarily works by opening potassium channels and increasing blood flow
GHK-Cu works through growth factor upregulation, gene expression modulation, and structural support
they are fundamentally different mechanisms hence why some people respond better or simply differently to each

the connectivity map discovery:

using the Broad Institute's connectivity map, GHK-Cu's effects on gene expression were analysed, finding that GHK-Cu modulates approximately 4,000 genes (31.2% of the tested human genome). a common view is that it works as a sort of reset, allowing aged cells to revert back to a younger expression profile

genes upregulated:

- DNA repair genes (47): aids in fixing accumulated dna damage
- antioxidant enzyme genes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione-related enzymes
- tissue repair genes: collagen, elastin, decorin, ECM proteins
- growth factor genes: VEGF, TGF-β, PDGF, FGF family
- stem cell activation genes: promotes stem cell differentiation toward repair

genes downregulated:

- inflammatory genes: TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, NFκB pathway components
- fibrotic genes: excessive TGF-β1, scarring factors
- fibrinogen synthesis genes: reduces clotting pathway overactivation
- cancer-associated genes: including some involved in metastasis (particularly metastatic colon cancer)

epigenetic effects:

GHK-Cu works through epigenetic modulation as opposed to full on genetic mutation. this allows for reversible and more readily targeted effects - like turning a gene up or down rather than changing it completely

clinical validation - COPD study:
In emphysema patients, gene expression profiles were severely altered
GHK-Cu reversed these changes, particularly in the TGF-β pathway
Genes involved in tissue repair were upregulated, inflammatory genes downregulated
This validated the Connectivity Map predictions in actual diseased tissue
Result: Cellular "rejuvenation" at the genetic level—the cell behaves younger.

superoxide dismutase (SOD):

GHK-Cu has SOD-mimetic activity, meaning it acts like the enzyme superoxide dismutase. it converts superoxide radicals (O₂⁻) into hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂). on a molar basis, GHK-Cu has between 1 and 3% of the activity of native Cu-Zn SOD enzyme, so it clearly isn't going to have ridiculous effects in this area, but a notable benefit albeit a marginal one

catalase:

GHK-Cu increases expression of catalase which breaks down H₂O₂ into water and oxygen, completing the antioxidant pathway: O₂⁻ → H₂O₂ → H₂O + O₂. this protects against both superoxide and peroxide damage

glutathione system:

upregulates (GSH) levels, the body's primary antioxidant important for neutralizing a wide range of free radicals and reactives.
this is significant in diabetic wounds with high oxidative stress, as described in the earlier section on this

NFκB pathway inhibition:

GHK-Cu inhibits activation of NFκB p65 which is a transcription factor driving inflammation
- reduces expression of cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
NFκB activation is also correlated with aging and cancer development - more on this later

p38 MAPK Modulation:

- blocks activation of p38 MAPK (mitogen activated protein kinase)
- responds to stress and triggers inflammatory responses leading to less cellular stress caused by inflammation

Copper Regulation:

GHK-Cu chelates copper, preventing free copper from participating in fenton reactions
- free copper can catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals
copper bound in the GHK-Cu complex is "safe" and bioavailable without toxicity - more later

VEGF upregulation:

GHK-Cu increases expression of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)
- VEGF is the primary regulator of blood vessel formation, signalling endothelial cells to proliferate and migrate

bFGF stimulation:

increases basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) production and works with VEGF to promote angiogenesis
- also has anti-apoptotic effects (prevents cell death) in endothelial cells

endothelial cell migration:

GHK-Cu acts as a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, promoting their migration toward areas needing vascularisation. this increases expression of cell adhesion molecules needed for vessel formation

clinical significance:
In wound healing: New blood vessels bring oxygen and nutrients to healing tissue
In ischemic conditions: Can help restore blood flow to oxygen-deprived areas
In skin: Better circulation = healthier, more vibrant appearance
Result: Improved tissue oxygenation, nutrient delivery, waste removal.



nerve growth factor (NGF) production:

GHK-Cu stimulates production of NGF and some other neurotrophic factors, supporting neuron survival and function. this improves nerve recovery and regrowth after injury and potentially improves formation of new nerve cells/synapses, improving cognition
axon regeneration:

increases migration of hematogenous cells into nerve repair sites
promotes growth of myelinated nerve fibers, which carry signals much faster (potentially orders of magnituted faster)
increases schwann cell count - these create the myelin sheath around the axon of nerve cells in the peripheral nervous system allowing for saltatory conduction

integrin expression:

upregulates integrins that help neurones bind and navigate extracellular matrix

gene expression effects:

modulates genes related to nervous system function
- anti-anxiety effects demonstrated in animal models

DISCLAIMER: this is preliminary research and should not be relied upon. education and hypothetical only.


metastasis gene downregulation:


gene expression signatures in metastatic colon cancer showed GHK-Cu downregulates pro-metastatic genes, reducing expression of genes associated with cancer spread and invasion - this is particularly effective against genes with the metastasis-prone signature

anti-proliferative effects:

GHK-Cu showed anti-tumor activity in sarcoma-180 tumour models, more so when combined with vitamin C. current theory suggests this may work by modulating copper availability in tumour cells

NFκB suppression:

GHK-Cu may also have some role in cancer prevention by inhibitng NFκB activation

uncertainty:

exact anti-cancer mechanisms are not fully understood
as i said earlier, this is preliminary and under-researched

stem cell mobilization:

- promotes differentiation of stem cells towards repair phenotypes
- increases expression of genes related to stem cell activation
- may help maintain stem cell populations as you age

cellular senescence reduction:

modulates pathways associated with cellular senescence, helping to clear senescent cells or prevent their accumulation in a similar way to MMPs like earlier. senescent cells produce inflammatory factors (SASP) that accelerate aging so it is obviously beneficial to reduce this as much as possible

replicative vitality:

GHK-Cu restores replicative capacity to fibroblasts damaged by radiation, suggesting it can reverse some forms of cellular damage

TGF-β activation​
fibroblast signaling​
increased collagen production​
Lysyl oxidase cofactor​
collagen cross linking​
skin strength​
MMP/TIMP balance​
ECM remodeling​
tissue renewal​
VEGF upregulation​
endothelial cells​
angiogenesis​
NFκB inhibition​
inflammation and related effects​
decreased chronic inflammation​
SOD-mimetic activity​
free radical scavenging​
antioxidant protection​
Gene expression modulation​
4k+ genes​
potentially innumerable​
Chemoattractant action​
immune cell recruitment​
wound healing​
Integrin expression​
cell to ECM adhesion​
cell migration​
Growth factor stimulation​
VEGF, FGF, TGF-β, etc.​
healing​








- overall very safe peptide without any serious side effects
- lethal dose is hundreds of times larger than what you'd be taking

side effects include:

topical: irritation
injectable: pain and bruisong locally at injection site, nausea, dizziness

all temporary and minor

topical is fda approved, injectable is not and experimental


Factor​
Topical​
Subq injection​
bioavailability​
low​
high - 10-20x topical​
speed​
8 weeks for significant benefits​
4 weeks​
systemic​
no​
yes​
cost​
low​
moderate​
convenience​
very high​
moderate​
pain​
none​
low​
skill​
none​
moderate - see my guide​
storage​
none​
fridge​
honestly just inject, not much else to it





what to look for:
COAs
high purity
<1 EU/mg endotoxin
heavy metal testing
cold pack shipping, especially if not lyophilised

what to be careful of:

low prices vs. alternatives
no COA
COA that doesnt match batch
no contact info
bad packaging
unrealistic claims

i havent decided yet whether im going to include peptide synergies here or make another thread dedicated to them, so blank for now

i have a draft of this section so if you are very interested in anything specific let me know

1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.




If you feel I have missed anything out, please let me know and I will include it.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated, and if there is anything you would like to see guides on - be it a different peptide or something unrelated - let me know.

Apologies also if the formatting is a bit inconsistent throughout, this took a while so i did some on my phone and some on computer.

I removed the section on dosages, please PM if you are unsure about this. I decided against instructing people dosages to use publicly.

Thanks, Cynic


@Nephilim
@Blackpillirony
@gameofb0nes
short tag list for now :peeposhy:

Bookmarked will read later.
 
.·*´¯`*·.¸¸*·.·.·.@Cynic*¸¸.·*´¯`*·.

Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. This is not medical advice and is purely educational content set in a hypothetical scenario. I do not take responsibility for any information found in this guide or any replies. Proceed at your own risk.


This is the first of a series of threads dedicated to peptides that have become increasingly popular. In particular with the rise in popularity of BP/LM on tiktok and other social media in recent years.

Please note this guide covers both topical and injectable GHK-Cu. I have labelled this in most instances but there is bound to be some where you will use the context to decide.
If this is your first time using peptides, please see my thread on safely storing and administering before you continue:






GHK is the abbreviation for Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine, a tripeptide (three amino acids (Glycine, Histidine, Lysine) linked together) that naturally occurs in human plasma, saliva and urine. It was first discovered/isolated from plasma in 1973 (Dr. Loren Pickart).

This discovery came specifically from observing human albumin causing old human liver tissue to synthesise proteins more efficiently - as younger tissue would. This led to masses of research into the regenerative properties of GHK, as we will discuss later.

It is primarily found in blood plasma (200ng/mL at age 20) and at lower/trace amounts in saliva and urine.

As you age, GHK levels decline massively - at age 60, concentration in plasma drops to around 80ng/mL. This decline is likely not coincidental with significant decrease in the body's regenerative ability.

GHK exists in T1 collagen and the protein SPARC. Proteolytic enzymes - a oart of your immune defence - release GHK as part of the healing response to tissue injury.

Copper is of course a transition metal element, essential in trace amounts for vital bodily functions; collagen production, antioxidant defence, metabolising iron, energy production, well functioning nervous system and angiogenesis.

GHK has a very high affinity for copper(ii) ions, allowing GHK to systemically transport directly to cells. This, in theory, should have positive effects on the above functions when dosed correctly

GHK binds to copper(ii) ions to form the GHK-Cu complex. This creates the bright blue colour, a more stable complex, and better bioavailability.

These are the primary benefits that people use GHK-Cu for - there are many others that may exist which i have gone much more in depth on under mechanisms of action. i didnt include many of them here because research is more limited and pathways are more complex. Please read the entirety of mechanisms of action for an in depth look at all effects of GHK-Cu. It is quite long, but well worth the read in my opinion, as well as independent research.

Skincare and Anti-aging
- increases collagen production up to 70%
- reduces wrinkle volume by up to 56%
- enhances elastin production
- enhanced tissue remodelling/repair


Wound Healing
- 30-50% faster healing of tissue
- potentially reduced scarring
- reduced inflammation

Hair Growth
- increases follicle size
- comparable efficiency to 5% minoxidil in some cases

GHK-Cu has a variety of complex and synergistic mechanisms of action at both cellular and molecular levels. I've separated these into how each benefit listed above may come about:

direct fibroblast activation:
- GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblasts to increase production of mRNA for collagen synthesis
- upregulates type I and type III collagen genes
- selectively stimulates collagen synthesis at concentrations as low as 0.01-1 nM without affecting non collagen protein synthesis

TGF-β pathway modulation
- GHK-Cu activates the TGF-β pathway, the primary regulator of collagen production
- GHK-Cu restored TGF-β activity to normal levels in COPD patients
- locally REDUCES TGF-β secretion during wound healing in order to prevent scarring


copper as an enzyme cofactor

- copper(ii) ion in GHK-Cu acts as a cofactor for enzymes lysyl oxidase and lysyl hydroxylase
- these enzymes create links between collagen fibres aiding in stability and strength
- lysyl oxidase creates the cross links that give skin tensile strength
- one of the primary reasons GHK-Cu is so much more effective than GHK alone


miscellaneous support
- increases production of decorin - proteoglycan that regulates organisation of collagen fibrils
- stimulates production of glycoaminoglycan which gives skin volume and aids in a hydrated look

one of my favourite mechanisms of this compound:

MMPs are enzymes that break down collagen and other ECM proteins. they are improtant in the role of tissue remodelling - they remove old and/or damaged collagen. of course this means too much MMP activity can lead to accelerated aging and skin damage.

GHK-Cu simultaneously stimulates MMPs when required for collagen/scar tissue removal and increases TIMPs (MMP inhibitors) to prevent excessive breakdown as described above.

in damaged skin, GHK-Cu increases MMPs to clear damaged proteins, while in healthy skin it increases TIMPs to protect these very same proteins while they are healthy
its almost like an intelligent tissue remodelling system

phase 1 - inflammation/hemostasis:

chemoattraction:
GHK-Cu acts as a potent chemoattractant for immune cells by attracting mast cells and macrophages to the wound site, releasing growth factors and cytokines that initiate healing

anti-inflammatory regulation:
- reduces inflammatory cytokines:
TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α)
IL-6 (interleukin-6)
- activates NFκB pathway suppression - NFκB is an inflammatory regulator
- prevents chronic inflammation without hindering immune response

phase 2 - proliferation:

angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation):
- upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) gene expression
- stimulates bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) production
- new capillaries bring oxygen and nutrients to tissue

fibroblast proliferation:
- increases fibroblast migration and proliferation at tissue site
- increases production of ECM proteins
- improves integrin β1 expression (integrins are proteins that anchor cells to the ECM)

keratinocyte migration:
- promotes re-epithelialization
- peratinocytes migrate across the wound bed to close the gap

phase 3 - remodeling:

anti-fibrotic action:
REDUCES TGF-β1 during this phase to prevent excessive scarring
promotes organized collagen deposition rather than random scar tissue formation
downregulates pro-fibrotic genes

Sscar tissue removal:
stimulates MMP production to break down disorganized scar collagen and replace it with organised
this is why GHK-Cu treated wounds have better cosmetic outcomes

special case - diabetic wounds:

in diabetics, GHK-Cu increased GSH and ascorbic acid levels at wound sites
40% increase in wound closure and 27% decrease in infection in clinical trials

follicle size increase:

GHK-Cu increases hair follicle size by stimulating cell proliferation in the follicle bulb, leading to thicker hairs. this was documented in vitro with dermal papilla cells

anagen phase extension:

the hair growth cycle has three phases: anagen, catagen, telogen
GHK-Cu extends the anagen phase, keeping hair in active growth longer

Scalp Circulation:

promoting angiogenesis (via VEGF), GHK-Cu increases blood flow to the scalp, increasing level of oxygen and nutrients to cells, supporting metabolic demands

Anti-Inflammatory Effects:

reduces scalp inflammation that can damage follicles, and suppresses TNF-α and IL-6, which are elevated in androgenetic alopecia. these combine to create a healthier overall environment for follicles

Growth Factor Stimulation:

increases production of growth factors that support follicle health
- IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) and FGF-7 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 7)
note; the interactions here are complicated and i still haven't researched enough to fully understand it, but it seems to regulate IGF-1 among other growth factors in a way similar to MMP regulation - using 'context' to either increase or decrease levels depending on the situation. this is also true for a few other interactions

Mechanism vs Minoxidil:

minoxidil primarily works by opening potassium channels and increasing blood flow
GHK-Cu works through growth factor upregulation, gene expression modulation, and structural support
they are fundamentally different mechanisms hence why some people respond better or simply differently to each

the connectivity map discovery:

using the Broad Institute's connectivity map, GHK-Cu's effects on gene expression were analysed, finding that GHK-Cu modulates approximately 4,000 genes (31.2% of the tested human genome). a common view is that it works as a sort of reset, allowing aged cells to revert back to a younger expression profile

genes upregulated:

- DNA repair genes (47): aids in fixing accumulated dna damage
- antioxidant enzyme genes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione-related enzymes
- tissue repair genes: collagen, elastin, decorin, ECM proteins
- growth factor genes: VEGF, TGF-β, PDGF, FGF family
- stem cell activation genes: promotes stem cell differentiation toward repair

genes downregulated:

- inflammatory genes: TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, NFκB pathway components
- fibrotic genes: excessive TGF-β1, scarring factors
- fibrinogen synthesis genes: reduces clotting pathway overactivation
- cancer-associated genes: including some involved in metastasis (particularly metastatic colon cancer)

epigenetic effects:

GHK-Cu works through epigenetic modulation as opposed to full on genetic mutation. this allows for reversible and more readily targeted effects - like turning a gene up or down rather than changing it completely

clinical validation - COPD study:
In emphysema patients, gene expression profiles were severely altered
GHK-Cu reversed these changes, particularly in the TGF-β pathway
Genes involved in tissue repair were upregulated, inflammatory genes downregulated
This validated the Connectivity Map predictions in actual diseased tissue
Result: Cellular "rejuvenation" at the genetic level—the cell behaves younger.

superoxide dismutase (SOD):

GHK-Cu has SOD-mimetic activity, meaning it acts like the enzyme superoxide dismutase. it converts superoxide radicals (O₂⁻) into hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂). on a molar basis, GHK-Cu has between 1 and 3% of the activity of native Cu-Zn SOD enzyme, so it clearly isn't going to have ridiculous effects in this area, but a notable benefit albeit a marginal one

catalase:

GHK-Cu increases expression of catalase which breaks down H₂O₂ into water and oxygen, completing the antioxidant pathway: O₂⁻ → H₂O₂ → H₂O + O₂. this protects against both superoxide and peroxide damage

glutathione system:

upregulates (GSH) levels, the body's primary antioxidant important for neutralizing a wide range of free radicals and reactives.
this is significant in diabetic wounds with high oxidative stress, as described in the earlier section on this

NFκB pathway inhibition:

GHK-Cu inhibits activation of NFκB p65 which is a transcription factor driving inflammation
- reduces expression of cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
NFκB activation is also correlated with aging and cancer development - more on this later

p38 MAPK Modulation:

- blocks activation of p38 MAPK (mitogen activated protein kinase)
- responds to stress and triggers inflammatory responses leading to less cellular stress caused by inflammation

Copper Regulation:

GHK-Cu chelates copper, preventing free copper from participating in fenton reactions
- free copper can catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals
copper bound in the GHK-Cu complex is "safe" and bioavailable without toxicity - more later

VEGF upregulation:

GHK-Cu increases expression of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)
- VEGF is the primary regulator of blood vessel formation, signalling endothelial cells to proliferate and migrate

bFGF stimulation:

increases basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) production and works with VEGF to promote angiogenesis
- also has anti-apoptotic effects (prevents cell death) in endothelial cells

endothelial cell migration:

GHK-Cu acts as a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, promoting their migration toward areas needing vascularisation. this increases expression of cell adhesion molecules needed for vessel formation

clinical significance:
In wound healing: New blood vessels bring oxygen and nutrients to healing tissue
In ischemic conditions: Can help restore blood flow to oxygen-deprived areas
In skin: Better circulation = healthier, more vibrant appearance
Result: Improved tissue oxygenation, nutrient delivery, waste removal.



nerve growth factor (NGF) production:

GHK-Cu stimulates production of NGF and some other neurotrophic factors, supporting neuron survival and function. this improves nerve recovery and regrowth after injury and potentially improves formation of new nerve cells/synapses, improving cognition
axon regeneration:

increases migration of hematogenous cells into nerve repair sites
promotes growth of myelinated nerve fibers, which carry signals much faster (potentially orders of magnituted faster)
increases schwann cell count - these create the myelin sheath around the axon of nerve cells in the peripheral nervous system allowing for saltatory conduction

integrin expression:

upregulates integrins that help neurones bind and navigate extracellular matrix

gene expression effects:

modulates genes related to nervous system function
- anti-anxiety effects demonstrated in animal models

DISCLAIMER: this is preliminary research and should not be relied upon. education and hypothetical only.


metastasis gene downregulation:


gene expression signatures in metastatic colon cancer showed GHK-Cu downregulates pro-metastatic genes, reducing expression of genes associated with cancer spread and invasion - this is particularly effective against genes with the metastasis-prone signature

anti-proliferative effects:

GHK-Cu showed anti-tumor activity in sarcoma-180 tumour models, more so when combined with vitamin C. current theory suggests this may work by modulating copper availability in tumour cells

NFκB suppression:

GHK-Cu may also have some role in cancer prevention by inhibitng NFκB activation

uncertainty:

exact anti-cancer mechanisms are not fully understood
as i said earlier, this is preliminary and under-researched

stem cell mobilization:

- promotes differentiation of stem cells towards repair phenotypes
- increases expression of genes related to stem cell activation
- may help maintain stem cell populations as you age

cellular senescence reduction:

modulates pathways associated with cellular senescence, helping to clear senescent cells or prevent their accumulation in a similar way to MMPs like earlier. senescent cells produce inflammatory factors (SASP) that accelerate aging so it is obviously beneficial to reduce this as much as possible

replicative vitality:

GHK-Cu restores replicative capacity to fibroblasts damaged by radiation, suggesting it can reverse some forms of cellular damage

TGF-β activation​
fibroblast signaling​
increased collagen production​
Lysyl oxidase cofactor​
collagen cross linking​
skin strength​
MMP/TIMP balance​
ECM remodeling​
tissue renewal​
VEGF upregulation​
endothelial cells​
angiogenesis​
NFκB inhibition​
inflammation and related effects​
decreased chronic inflammation​
SOD-mimetic activity​
free radical scavenging​
antioxidant protection​
Gene expression modulation​
4k+ genes​
potentially innumerable​
Chemoattractant action​
immune cell recruitment​
wound healing​
Integrin expression​
cell to ECM adhesion​
cell migration​
Growth factor stimulation​
VEGF, FGF, TGF-β, etc.​
healing​








- overall very safe peptide without any serious side effects
- lethal dose is hundreds of times larger than what you'd be taking

side effects include:

topical: irritation
injectable: pain and bruisong locally at injection site, nausea, dizziness

all temporary and minor

topical is fda approved, injectable is not and experimental


Factor​
Topical​
Subq injection​
bioavailability​
low​
high - 10-20x topical​
speed​
8 weeks for significant benefits​
4 weeks​
systemic​
no​
yes​
cost​
low​
moderate​
convenience​
very high​
moderate​
pain​
none​
low​
skill​
none​
moderate - see my guide​
storage​
none​
fridge​
honestly just inject, not much else to it





what to look for:
COAs
high purity
<1 EU/mg endotoxin
heavy metal testing
cold pack shipping, especially if not lyophilised

what to be careful of:

low prices vs. alternatives
no COA
COA that doesnt match batch
no contact info
bad packaging
unrealistic claims

i havent decided yet whether im going to include peptide synergies here or make another thread dedicated to them, so blank for now

i have a draft of this section so if you are very interested in anything specific let me know

1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.




If you feel I have missed anything out, please let me know and I will include it.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated, and if there is anything you would like to see guides on - be it a different peptide or something unrelated - let me know.

Apologies also if the formatting is a bit inconsistent throughout, this took a while so i did some on my phone and some on computer.

I removed the section on dosages, please PM if you are unsure about this. I decided against instructing people dosages to use publicly.

Thanks, Cynic


@Nephilim
@Blackpillirony
@gameofb0nes
short tag list for now :peeposhy:

Thank you sm omg
 
bump
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Muh "short tag list" still no excuse to exclude the forums top dog
Dnr
But since you clearly spent a couple of minutes on ts ig, you can get a gold, appreciate it

1000000401.gif
 
.·*´¯`*·.¸¸*·.·.·.@Cynic*¸¸.·*´¯`*·.

Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. This is not medical advice and is purely educational content set in a hypothetical scenario. I do not take responsibility for any information found in this guide or any replies. Proceed at your own risk.


This is the first of a series of threads dedicated to peptides that have become increasingly popular. In particular with the rise in popularity of BP/LM on tiktok and other social media in recent years.

Please note this guide covers both topical and injectable GHK-Cu. I have labelled this in most instances but there is bound to be some where you will use the context to decide.
If this is your first time using peptides, please see my thread on safely storing and administering before you continue:






GHK is the abbreviation for Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine, a tripeptide (three amino acids (Glycine, Histidine, Lysine) linked together) that naturally occurs in human plasma, saliva and urine. It was first discovered/isolated from plasma in 1973 (Dr. Loren Pickart).

This discovery came specifically from observing human albumin causing old human liver tissue to synthesise proteins more efficiently - as younger tissue would. This led to masses of research into the regenerative properties of GHK, as we will discuss later.

It is primarily found in blood plasma (200ng/mL at age 20) and at lower/trace amounts in saliva and urine.

As you age, GHK levels decline massively - at age 60, concentration in plasma drops to around 80ng/mL. This decline is likely not coincidental with significant decrease in the body's regenerative ability.

GHK exists in T1 collagen and the protein SPARC. Proteolytic enzymes - a oart of your immune defence - release GHK as part of the healing response to tissue injury.

Copper is of course a transition metal element, essential in trace amounts for vital bodily functions; collagen production, antioxidant defence, metabolising iron, energy production, well functioning nervous system and angiogenesis.

GHK has a very high affinity for copper(ii) ions, allowing GHK to systemically transport directly to cells. This, in theory, should have positive effects on the above functions when dosed correctly

GHK binds to copper(ii) ions to form the GHK-Cu complex. This creates the bright blue colour, a more stable complex, and better bioavailability.

These are the primary benefits that people use GHK-Cu for - there are many others that may exist which i have gone much more in depth on under mechanisms of action. i didnt include many of them here because research is more limited and pathways are more complex. Please read the entirety of mechanisms of action for an in depth look at all effects of GHK-Cu. It is quite long, but well worth the read in my opinion, as well as independent research.

Skincare and Anti-aging
- increases collagen production up to 70%
- reduces wrinkle volume by up to 56%
- enhances elastin production
- enhanced tissue remodelling/repair


Wound Healing
- 30-50% faster healing of tissue
- potentially reduced scarring
- reduced inflammation

Hair Growth
- increases follicle size
- comparable efficiency to 5% minoxidil in some cases

GHK-Cu has a variety of complex and synergistic mechanisms of action at both cellular and molecular levels. I've separated these into how each benefit listed above may come about:

direct fibroblast activation:
- GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblasts to increase production of mRNA for collagen synthesis
- upregulates type I and type III collagen genes
- selectively stimulates collagen synthesis at concentrations as low as 0.01-1 nM without affecting non collagen protein synthesis

TGF-β pathway modulation
- GHK-Cu activates the TGF-β pathway, the primary regulator of collagen production
- GHK-Cu restored TGF-β activity to normal levels in COPD patients
- locally REDUCES TGF-β secretion during wound healing in order to prevent scarring


copper as an enzyme cofactor

- copper(ii) ion in GHK-Cu acts as a cofactor for enzymes lysyl oxidase and lysyl hydroxylase
- these enzymes create links between collagen fibres aiding in stability and strength
- lysyl oxidase creates the cross links that give skin tensile strength
- one of the primary reasons GHK-Cu is so much more effective than GHK alone


miscellaneous support
- increases production of decorin - proteoglycan that regulates organisation of collagen fibrils
- stimulates production of glycoaminoglycan which gives skin volume and aids in a hydrated look

one of my favourite mechanisms of this compound:

MMPs are enzymes that break down collagen and other ECM proteins. they are improtant in the role of tissue remodelling - they remove old and/or damaged collagen. of course this means too much MMP activity can lead to accelerated aging and skin damage.

GHK-Cu simultaneously stimulates MMPs when required for collagen/scar tissue removal and increases TIMPs (MMP inhibitors) to prevent excessive breakdown as described above.

in damaged skin, GHK-Cu increases MMPs to clear damaged proteins, while in healthy skin it increases TIMPs to protect these very same proteins while they are healthy
its almost like an intelligent tissue remodelling system

phase 1 - inflammation/hemostasis:

chemoattraction:
GHK-Cu acts as a potent chemoattractant for immune cells by attracting mast cells and macrophages to the wound site, releasing growth factors and cytokines that initiate healing

anti-inflammatory regulation:
- reduces inflammatory cytokines:
TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α)
IL-6 (interleukin-6)
- activates NFκB pathway suppression - NFκB is an inflammatory regulator
- prevents chronic inflammation without hindering immune response

phase 2 - proliferation:

angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation):
- upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) gene expression
- stimulates bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) production
- new capillaries bring oxygen and nutrients to tissue

fibroblast proliferation:
- increases fibroblast migration and proliferation at tissue site
- increases production of ECM proteins
- improves integrin β1 expression (integrins are proteins that anchor cells to the ECM)

keratinocyte migration:
- promotes re-epithelialization
- peratinocytes migrate across the wound bed to close the gap

phase 3 - remodeling:

anti-fibrotic action:
REDUCES TGF-β1 during this phase to prevent excessive scarring
promotes organized collagen deposition rather than random scar tissue formation
downregulates pro-fibrotic genes

Sscar tissue removal:
stimulates MMP production to break down disorganized scar collagen and replace it with organised
this is why GHK-Cu treated wounds have better cosmetic outcomes

special case - diabetic wounds:

in diabetics, GHK-Cu increased GSH and ascorbic acid levels at wound sites
40% increase in wound closure and 27% decrease in infection in clinical trials

follicle size increase:

GHK-Cu increases hair follicle size by stimulating cell proliferation in the follicle bulb, leading to thicker hairs. this was documented in vitro with dermal papilla cells

anagen phase extension:

the hair growth cycle has three phases: anagen, catagen, telogen
GHK-Cu extends the anagen phase, keeping hair in active growth longer

Scalp Circulation:

promoting angiogenesis (via VEGF), GHK-Cu increases blood flow to the scalp, increasing level of oxygen and nutrients to cells, supporting metabolic demands

Anti-Inflammatory Effects:

reduces scalp inflammation that can damage follicles, and suppresses TNF-α and IL-6, which are elevated in androgenetic alopecia. these combine to create a healthier overall environment for follicles

Growth Factor Stimulation:

increases production of growth factors that support follicle health
- IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) and FGF-7 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 7)
note; the interactions here are complicated and i still haven't researched enough to fully understand it, but it seems to regulate IGF-1 among other growth factors in a way similar to MMP regulation - using 'context' to either increase or decrease levels depending on the situation. this is also true for a few other interactions

Mechanism vs Minoxidil:

minoxidil primarily works by opening potassium channels and increasing blood flow
GHK-Cu works through growth factor upregulation, gene expression modulation, and structural support
they are fundamentally different mechanisms hence why some people respond better or simply differently to each

the connectivity map discovery:

using the Broad Institute's connectivity map, GHK-Cu's effects on gene expression were analysed, finding that GHK-Cu modulates approximately 4,000 genes (31.2% of the tested human genome). a common view is that it works as a sort of reset, allowing aged cells to revert back to a younger expression profile

genes upregulated:

- DNA repair genes (47): aids in fixing accumulated dna damage
- antioxidant enzyme genes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione-related enzymes
- tissue repair genes: collagen, elastin, decorin, ECM proteins
- growth factor genes: VEGF, TGF-β, PDGF, FGF family
- stem cell activation genes: promotes stem cell differentiation toward repair

genes downregulated:

- inflammatory genes: TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, NFκB pathway components
- fibrotic genes: excessive TGF-β1, scarring factors
- fibrinogen synthesis genes: reduces clotting pathway overactivation
- cancer-associated genes: including some involved in metastasis (particularly metastatic colon cancer)

epigenetic effects:

GHK-Cu works through epigenetic modulation as opposed to full on genetic mutation. this allows for reversible and more readily targeted effects - like turning a gene up or down rather than changing it completely

clinical validation - COPD study:
In emphysema patients, gene expression profiles were severely altered
GHK-Cu reversed these changes, particularly in the TGF-β pathway
Genes involved in tissue repair were upregulated, inflammatory genes downregulated
This validated the Connectivity Map predictions in actual diseased tissue
Result: Cellular "rejuvenation" at the genetic level—the cell behaves younger.

superoxide dismutase (SOD):

GHK-Cu has SOD-mimetic activity, meaning it acts like the enzyme superoxide dismutase. it converts superoxide radicals (O₂⁻) into hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂). on a molar basis, GHK-Cu has between 1 and 3% of the activity of native Cu-Zn SOD enzyme, so it clearly isn't going to have ridiculous effects in this area, but a notable benefit albeit a marginal one

catalase:

GHK-Cu increases expression of catalase which breaks down H₂O₂ into water and oxygen, completing the antioxidant pathway: O₂⁻ → H₂O₂ → H₂O + O₂. this protects against both superoxide and peroxide damage

glutathione system:

upregulates (GSH) levels, the body's primary antioxidant important for neutralizing a wide range of free radicals and reactives.
this is significant in diabetic wounds with high oxidative stress, as described in the earlier section on this

NFκB pathway inhibition:

GHK-Cu inhibits activation of NFκB p65 which is a transcription factor driving inflammation
- reduces expression of cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
NFκB activation is also correlated with aging and cancer development - more on this later

p38 MAPK Modulation:

- blocks activation of p38 MAPK (mitogen activated protein kinase)
- responds to stress and triggers inflammatory responses leading to less cellular stress caused by inflammation

Copper Regulation:

GHK-Cu chelates copper, preventing free copper from participating in fenton reactions
- free copper can catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals
copper bound in the GHK-Cu complex is "safe" and bioavailable without toxicity - more later

VEGF upregulation:

GHK-Cu increases expression of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)
- VEGF is the primary regulator of blood vessel formation, signalling endothelial cells to proliferate and migrate

bFGF stimulation:

increases basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) production and works with VEGF to promote angiogenesis
- also has anti-apoptotic effects (prevents cell death) in endothelial cells

endothelial cell migration:

GHK-Cu acts as a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, promoting their migration toward areas needing vascularisation. this increases expression of cell adhesion molecules needed for vessel formation

clinical significance:
In wound healing: New blood vessels bring oxygen and nutrients to healing tissue
In ischemic conditions: Can help restore blood flow to oxygen-deprived areas
In skin: Better circulation = healthier, more vibrant appearance
Result: Improved tissue oxygenation, nutrient delivery, waste removal.



nerve growth factor (NGF) production:

GHK-Cu stimulates production of NGF and some other neurotrophic factors, supporting neuron survival and function. this improves nerve recovery and regrowth after injury and potentially improves formation of new nerve cells/synapses, improving cognition
axon regeneration:

increases migration of hematogenous cells into nerve repair sites
promotes growth of myelinated nerve fibers, which carry signals much faster (potentially orders of magnituted faster)
increases schwann cell count - these create the myelin sheath around the axon of nerve cells in the peripheral nervous system allowing for saltatory conduction

integrin expression:

upregulates integrins that help neurones bind and navigate extracellular matrix

gene expression effects:

modulates genes related to nervous system function
- anti-anxiety effects demonstrated in animal models

DISCLAIMER: this is preliminary research and should not be relied upon. education and hypothetical only.


metastasis gene downregulation:


gene expression signatures in metastatic colon cancer showed GHK-Cu downregulates pro-metastatic genes, reducing expression of genes associated with cancer spread and invasion - this is particularly effective against genes with the metastasis-prone signature

anti-proliferative effects:

GHK-Cu showed anti-tumor activity in sarcoma-180 tumour models, more so when combined with vitamin C. current theory suggests this may work by modulating copper availability in tumour cells

NFκB suppression:

GHK-Cu may also have some role in cancer prevention by inhibitng NFκB activation

uncertainty:

exact anti-cancer mechanisms are not fully understood
as i said earlier, this is preliminary and under-researched

stem cell mobilization:

- promotes differentiation of stem cells towards repair phenotypes
- increases expression of genes related to stem cell activation
- may help maintain stem cell populations as you age

cellular senescence reduction:

modulates pathways associated with cellular senescence, helping to clear senescent cells or prevent their accumulation in a similar way to MMPs like earlier. senescent cells produce inflammatory factors (SASP) that accelerate aging so it is obviously beneficial to reduce this as much as possible

replicative vitality:

GHK-Cu restores replicative capacity to fibroblasts damaged by radiation, suggesting it can reverse some forms of cellular damage

TGF-β activation​
fibroblast signaling​
increased collagen production​
Lysyl oxidase cofactor​
collagen cross linking​
skin strength​
MMP/TIMP balance​
ECM remodeling​
tissue renewal​
VEGF upregulation​
endothelial cells​
angiogenesis​
NFκB inhibition​
inflammation and related effects​
decreased chronic inflammation​
SOD-mimetic activity​
free radical scavenging​
antioxidant protection​
Gene expression modulation​
4k+ genes​
potentially innumerable​
Chemoattractant action​
immune cell recruitment​
wound healing​
Integrin expression​
cell to ECM adhesion​
cell migration​
Growth factor stimulation​
VEGF, FGF, TGF-β, etc.​
healing​








- overall very safe peptide without any serious side effects
- lethal dose is hundreds of times larger than what you'd be taking

side effects include:

topical: irritation
injectable: pain and bruisong locally at injection site, nausea, dizziness

all temporary and minor

topical is fda approved, injectable is not and experimental


Factor​
Topical​
Subq injection​
bioavailability​
low​
high - 10-20x topical​
speed​
8 weeks for significant benefits​
4 weeks​
systemic​
no​
yes​
cost​
low​
moderate​
convenience​
very high​
moderate​
pain​
none​
low​
skill​
none​
moderate - see my guide​
storage​
none​
fridge​
honestly just inject, not much else to it





what to look for:
COAs
high purity
<1 EU/mg endotoxin
heavy metal testing
cold pack shipping, especially if not lyophilised

what to be careful of:

low prices vs. alternatives
no COA
COA that doesnt match batch
no contact info
bad packaging
unrealistic claims

i havent decided yet whether im going to include peptide synergies here or make another thread dedicated to them, so blank for now

i have a draft of this section so if you are very interested in anything specific let me know

1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.




If you feel I have missed anything out, please let me know and I will include it.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated, and if there is anything you would like to see guides on - be it a different peptide or something unrelated - let me know.

Apologies also if the formatting is a bit inconsistent throughout, this took a while so i did some on my phone and some on computer.

I removed the section on dosages, please PM if you are unsure about this. I decided against instructing people dosages to use publicly.

Thanks, Cynic


@Nephilim
@Blackpillirony
@gameofb0nes
short tag list for now :peeposhy:

great great great deserves gold
 
I skimmed your thread, it's decent ig.

I didn't really bother checking the literature referenced in the thread, and admittedly, I don't really care too much to validate them.

Strictly based on what I read ( and correct me if I'm wrong), you failed to mention any method regarding the reconstitution of ghk-cu, whether via bac water ( most commonly used by retarded TikTok cells), or PBS (phosphate-buffered saline).

Most metals require ions to stabilize them, primarily due to their tendency to lose electrons and form positive charges. The ions in PBS can neutralize the positive charge of the copper ions, which in turn reduces the likelihood of oxidation or other reactions that would destabilize the copper.

This is why many people report pain after injecting ghk-cu reconstituted with bac, since the free copper atoms are raping your tissues

1770949464689.webp



1770949505576.webp


Not to mention that it's what's mostly used in studies. ( albeit there is a lack of clinical evidence on injectable ghk-cu on humans, and most of this is pure extrapolation from what was concluded in the studies that were mostly conducted on mice, afaik).

Another thing that I believe deserved a mention, was that the human equivalent to the minimum effective dose for ghk-cu is like 20mg/day, iirc.

As afromentioned, there is a lack of human trials on injectable ghk-cu; therefore, one can only theorise/extrapolate the minimum effective dose that was found on mice and try to convert that to humans, but don't take my word for it.

One last thing I felt like adding, is to shed light on the importance of zinc supplementation to maintain the Cu/Zn balance, as the increased copper availability from ghk-cu can induce a functional zinc deficiency. which comes with a plethora of its own issues.

With that being said, good thread.
 
.·*´¯`*·.¸¸*·.·.·.@Cynic*¸¸.·*´¯`*·.

Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. This is not medical advice and is purely educational content set in a hypothetical scenario. I do not take responsibility for any information found in this guide or any replies. Proceed at your own risk.


This is the first of a series of threads dedicated to peptides that have become increasingly popular. In particular with the rise in popularity of BP/LM on tiktok and other social media in recent years.

Please note this guide covers both topical and injectable GHK-Cu. I have labelled this in most instances but there is bound to be some where you will use the context to decide.
If this is your first time using peptides, please see my thread on safely storing and administering before you continue:






GHK is the abbreviation for Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine, a tripeptide (three amino acids (Glycine, Histidine, Lysine) linked together) that naturally occurs in human plasma, saliva and urine. It was first discovered/isolated from plasma in 1973 (Dr. Loren Pickart).

This discovery came specifically from observing human albumin causing old human liver tissue to synthesise proteins more efficiently - as younger tissue would. This led to masses of research into the regenerative properties of GHK, as we will discuss later.

It is primarily found in blood plasma (200ng/mL at age 20) and at lower/trace amounts in saliva and urine.

As you age, GHK levels decline massively - at age 60, concentration in plasma drops to around 80ng/mL. This decline is likely not coincidental with significant decrease in the body's regenerative ability.

GHK exists in T1 collagen and the protein SPARC. Proteolytic enzymes - a oart of your immune defence - release GHK as part of the healing response to tissue injury.

Copper is of course a transition metal element, essential in trace amounts for vital bodily functions; collagen production, antioxidant defence, metabolising iron, energy production, well functioning nervous system and angiogenesis.

GHK has a very high affinity for copper(ii) ions, allowing GHK to systemically transport directly to cells. This, in theory, should have positive effects on the above functions when dosed correctly

GHK binds to copper(ii) ions to form the GHK-Cu complex. This creates the bright blue colour, a more stable complex, and better bioavailability.

These are the primary benefits that people use GHK-Cu for - there are many others that may exist which i have gone much more in depth on under mechanisms of action. i didnt include many of them here because research is more limited and pathways are more complex. Please read the entirety of mechanisms of action for an in depth look at all effects of GHK-Cu. It is quite long, but well worth the read in my opinion, as well as independent research.

Skincare and Anti-aging
- increases collagen production up to 70%
- reduces wrinkle volume by up to 56%
- enhances elastin production
- enhanced tissue remodelling/repair


Wound Healing
- 30-50% faster healing of tissue
- potentially reduced scarring
- reduced inflammation

Hair Growth
- increases follicle size
- comparable efficiency to 5% minoxidil in some cases

GHK-Cu has a variety of complex and synergistic mechanisms of action at both cellular and molecular levels. I've separated these into how each benefit listed above may come about:

direct fibroblast activation:
- GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblasts to increase production of mRNA for collagen synthesis
- upregulates type I and type III collagen genes
- selectively stimulates collagen synthesis at concentrations as low as 0.01-1 nM without affecting non collagen protein synthesis

TGF-β pathway modulation
- GHK-Cu activates the TGF-β pathway, the primary regulator of collagen production
- GHK-Cu restored TGF-β activity to normal levels in COPD patients
- locally REDUCES TGF-β secretion during wound healing in order to prevent scarring


copper as an enzyme cofactor

- copper(ii) ion in GHK-Cu acts as a cofactor for enzymes lysyl oxidase and lysyl hydroxylase
- these enzymes create links between collagen fibres aiding in stability and strength
- lysyl oxidase creates the cross links that give skin tensile strength
- one of the primary reasons GHK-Cu is so much more effective than GHK alone


miscellaneous support
- increases production of decorin - proteoglycan that regulates organisation of collagen fibrils
- stimulates production of glycoaminoglycan which gives skin volume and aids in a hydrated look

one of my favourite mechanisms of this compound:

MMPs are enzymes that break down collagen and other ECM proteins. they are improtant in the role of tissue remodelling - they remove old and/or damaged collagen. of course this means too much MMP activity can lead to accelerated aging and skin damage.

GHK-Cu simultaneously stimulates MMPs when required for collagen/scar tissue removal and increases TIMPs (MMP inhibitors) to prevent excessive breakdown as described above.

in damaged skin, GHK-Cu increases MMPs to clear damaged proteins, while in healthy skin it increases TIMPs to protect these very same proteins while they are healthy
its almost like an intelligent tissue remodelling system

phase 1 - inflammation/hemostasis:

chemoattraction:
GHK-Cu acts as a potent chemoattractant for immune cells by attracting mast cells and macrophages to the wound site, releasing growth factors and cytokines that initiate healing

anti-inflammatory regulation:
- reduces inflammatory cytokines:
TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α)
IL-6 (interleukin-6)
- activates NFκB pathway suppression - NFκB is an inflammatory regulator
- prevents chronic inflammation without hindering immune response

phase 2 - proliferation:

angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation):
- upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) gene expression
- stimulates bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) production
- new capillaries bring oxygen and nutrients to tissue

fibroblast proliferation:
- increases fibroblast migration and proliferation at tissue site
- increases production of ECM proteins
- improves integrin β1 expression (integrins are proteins that anchor cells to the ECM)

keratinocyte migration:
- promotes re-epithelialization
- peratinocytes migrate across the wound bed to close the gap

phase 3 - remodeling:

anti-fibrotic action:
REDUCES TGF-β1 during this phase to prevent excessive scarring
promotes organized collagen deposition rather than random scar tissue formation
downregulates pro-fibrotic genes

Sscar tissue removal:
stimulates MMP production to break down disorganized scar collagen and replace it with organised
this is why GHK-Cu treated wounds have better cosmetic outcomes

special case - diabetic wounds:

in diabetics, GHK-Cu increased GSH and ascorbic acid levels at wound sites
40% increase in wound closure and 27% decrease in infection in clinical trials

follicle size increase:

GHK-Cu increases hair follicle size by stimulating cell proliferation in the follicle bulb, leading to thicker hairs. this was documented in vitro with dermal papilla cells

anagen phase extension:

the hair growth cycle has three phases: anagen, catagen, telogen
GHK-Cu extends the anagen phase, keeping hair in active growth longer

Scalp Circulation:

promoting angiogenesis (via VEGF), GHK-Cu increases blood flow to the scalp, increasing level of oxygen and nutrients to cells, supporting metabolic demands

Anti-Inflammatory Effects:

reduces scalp inflammation that can damage follicles, and suppresses TNF-α and IL-6, which are elevated in androgenetic alopecia. these combine to create a healthier overall environment for follicles

Growth Factor Stimulation:

increases production of growth factors that support follicle health
- IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) and FGF-7 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 7)
note; the interactions here are complicated and i still haven't researched enough to fully understand it, but it seems to regulate IGF-1 among other growth factors in a way similar to MMP regulation - using 'context' to either increase or decrease levels depending on the situation. this is also true for a few other interactions

Mechanism vs Minoxidil:

minoxidil primarily works by opening potassium channels and increasing blood flow
GHK-Cu works through growth factor upregulation, gene expression modulation, and structural support
they are fundamentally different mechanisms hence why some people respond better or simply differently to each

the connectivity map discovery:

using the Broad Institute's connectivity map, GHK-Cu's effects on gene expression were analysed, finding that GHK-Cu modulates approximately 4,000 genes (31.2% of the tested human genome). a common view is that it works as a sort of reset, allowing aged cells to revert back to a younger expression profile

genes upregulated:

- DNA repair genes (47): aids in fixing accumulated dna damage
- antioxidant enzyme genes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione-related enzymes
- tissue repair genes: collagen, elastin, decorin, ECM proteins
- growth factor genes: VEGF, TGF-β, PDGF, FGF family
- stem cell activation genes: promotes stem cell differentiation toward repair

genes downregulated:

- inflammatory genes: TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, NFκB pathway components
- fibrotic genes: excessive TGF-β1, scarring factors
- fibrinogen synthesis genes: reduces clotting pathway overactivation
- cancer-associated genes: including some involved in metastasis (particularly metastatic colon cancer)

epigenetic effects:

GHK-Cu works through epigenetic modulation as opposed to full on genetic mutation. this allows for reversible and more readily targeted effects - like turning a gene up or down rather than changing it completely

clinical validation - COPD study:
In emphysema patients, gene expression profiles were severely altered
GHK-Cu reversed these changes, particularly in the TGF-β pathway
Genes involved in tissue repair were upregulated, inflammatory genes downregulated
This validated the Connectivity Map predictions in actual diseased tissue
Result: Cellular "rejuvenation" at the genetic level—the cell behaves younger.

superoxide dismutase (SOD):

GHK-Cu has SOD-mimetic activity, meaning it acts like the enzyme superoxide dismutase. it converts superoxide radicals (O₂⁻) into hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂). on a molar basis, GHK-Cu has between 1 and 3% of the activity of native Cu-Zn SOD enzyme, so it clearly isn't going to have ridiculous effects in this area, but a notable benefit albeit a marginal one

catalase:

GHK-Cu increases expression of catalase which breaks down H₂O₂ into water and oxygen, completing the antioxidant pathway: O₂⁻ → H₂O₂ → H₂O + O₂. this protects against both superoxide and peroxide damage

glutathione system:

upregulates (GSH) levels, the body's primary antioxidant important for neutralizing a wide range of free radicals and reactives.
this is significant in diabetic wounds with high oxidative stress, as described in the earlier section on this

NFκB pathway inhibition:

GHK-Cu inhibits activation of NFκB p65 which is a transcription factor driving inflammation
- reduces expression of cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
NFκB activation is also correlated with aging and cancer development - more on this later

p38 MAPK Modulation:

- blocks activation of p38 MAPK (mitogen activated protein kinase)
- responds to stress and triggers inflammatory responses leading to less cellular stress caused by inflammation

Copper Regulation:

GHK-Cu chelates copper, preventing free copper from participating in fenton reactions
- free copper can catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals
copper bound in the GHK-Cu complex is "safe" and bioavailable without toxicity - more later

VEGF upregulation:

GHK-Cu increases expression of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)
- VEGF is the primary regulator of blood vessel formation, signalling endothelial cells to proliferate and migrate

bFGF stimulation:

increases basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) production and works with VEGF to promote angiogenesis
- also has anti-apoptotic effects (prevents cell death) in endothelial cells

endothelial cell migration:

GHK-Cu acts as a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, promoting their migration toward areas needing vascularisation. this increases expression of cell adhesion molecules needed for vessel formation

clinical significance:
In wound healing: New blood vessels bring oxygen and nutrients to healing tissue
In ischemic conditions: Can help restore blood flow to oxygen-deprived areas
In skin: Better circulation = healthier, more vibrant appearance
Result: Improved tissue oxygenation, nutrient delivery, waste removal.



nerve growth factor (NGF) production:

GHK-Cu stimulates production of NGF and some other neurotrophic factors, supporting neuron survival and function. this improves nerve recovery and regrowth after injury and potentially improves formation of new nerve cells/synapses, improving cognition
axon regeneration:

increases migration of hematogenous cells into nerve repair sites
promotes growth of myelinated nerve fibers, which carry signals much faster (potentially orders of magnituted faster)
increases schwann cell count - these create the myelin sheath around the axon of nerve cells in the peripheral nervous system allowing for saltatory conduction

integrin expression:

upregulates integrins that help neurones bind and navigate extracellular matrix

gene expression effects:

modulates genes related to nervous system function
- anti-anxiety effects demonstrated in animal models

DISCLAIMER: this is preliminary research and should not be relied upon. education and hypothetical only.


metastasis gene downregulation:


gene expression signatures in metastatic colon cancer showed GHK-Cu downregulates pro-metastatic genes, reducing expression of genes associated with cancer spread and invasion - this is particularly effective against genes with the metastasis-prone signature

anti-proliferative effects:

GHK-Cu showed anti-tumor activity in sarcoma-180 tumour models, more so when combined with vitamin C. current theory suggests this may work by modulating copper availability in tumour cells

NFκB suppression:

GHK-Cu may also have some role in cancer prevention by inhibitng NFκB activation

uncertainty:

exact anti-cancer mechanisms are not fully understood
as i said earlier, this is preliminary and under-researched

stem cell mobilization:

- promotes differentiation of stem cells towards repair phenotypes
- increases expression of genes related to stem cell activation
- may help maintain stem cell populations as you age

cellular senescence reduction:

modulates pathways associated with cellular senescence, helping to clear senescent cells or prevent their accumulation in a similar way to MMPs like earlier. senescent cells produce inflammatory factors (SASP) that accelerate aging so it is obviously beneficial to reduce this as much as possible

replicative vitality:

GHK-Cu restores replicative capacity to fibroblasts damaged by radiation, suggesting it can reverse some forms of cellular damage
TGF-β activation​
fibroblast signaling​
increased collagen production​
Lysyl oxidase cofactor​
collagen cross linking​
skin strength​
MMP/TIMP balance​
ECM remodeling​
tissue renewal​
VEGF upregulation​
endothelial cells​
angiogenesis​
NFκB inhibition​
inflammation and related effects​
decreased chronic inflammation​
SOD-mimetic activity​
free radical scavenging​
antioxidant protection​
Gene expression modulation​
4k+ genes​
potentially innumerable​
Chemoattractant action​
immune cell recruitment​
wound healing​
Integrin expression​
cell to ECM adhesion​
cell migration​
Growth factor stimulation​
VEGF, FGF, TGF-β, etc.​
healing​








- overall very safe peptide without any serious side effects
- lethal dose is hundreds of times larger than what you'd be taking

side effects include:

topical: irritation
injectable: pain and bruisong locally at injection site, nausea, dizziness

all temporary and minor

topical is fda approved, injectable is not and experimental


Factor​
Topical​
Subq injection​
bioavailability​
low​
high - 10-20x topical​
speed​
8 weeks for significant benefits​
4 weeks​
systemic​
no​
yes​
cost​
low​
moderate​
convenience​
very high​
moderate​
pain​
none​
low​
skill​
none​
moderate - see my guide​
storage​
none​
fridge​
honestly just inject, not much else to it





what to look for:
COAs
high purity
<1 EU/mg endotoxin
heavy metal testing
cold pack shipping, especially if not lyophilised

what to be careful of:

low prices vs. alternatives
no COA
COA that doesnt match batch
no contact info
bad packaging
unrealistic claims

i havent decided yet whether im going to include peptide synergies here or make another thread dedicated to them, so blank for now

i have a draft of this section so if you are very interested in anything specific let me know

1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.




If you feel I have missed anything out, please let me know and I will include it.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated, and if there is anything you would like to see guides on - be it a different peptide or something unrelated - let me know.

Apologies also if the formatting is a bit inconsistent throughout, this took a while so i did some on my phone and some on computer.

I removed the section on dosages, please PM if you are unsure about this. I decided against instructing people dosages to use publicly.

Thanks, Cynic


@Nephilim
@Blackpillirony
@gameofb0nes
short tag list for now :peeposhy:

Have you heard about potential gum recession reversal caused by ghkcu? This pep is a superpowered one. Also incredible thread mirin
 
Have you heard about potential gum recession reversal caused by ghkcu? This pep is a superpowered one. Also incredible thread mirin
No but i'll have to have a look
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Asking for must reads before contributor is crazy
Not at all, contributor implies consistent quality threads and/or giving of advice under threads, former of which i have only done twice. Must Reads can simply be one thread that people... must read!
 
Not at all, contributor implies consistent quality threads and/or giving of advice under threads, former of which i have only done twice. Must Reads can simply be one thread that people... must read!
What bro, if @Hyaluronic could get contributor for his bum ahh shit you 100% can rn 😡 right @TonyDr
 
.·*´¯`*·.¸¸*·.·.·.@Cynic*¸¸.·*´¯`*·.

Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. This is not medical advice and is purely educational content set in a hypothetical scenario. I do not take responsibility for any information found in this guide or any replies. Proceed at your own risk.


This is the first of a series of threads dedicated to peptides that have become increasingly popular. In particular with the rise in popularity of BP/LM on tiktok and other social media in recent years.

Please note this guide covers both topical and injectable GHK-Cu. I have labelled this in most instances but there is bound to be some where you will use the context to decide.
If this is your first time using peptides, please see my thread on safely storing and administering before you continue:






GHK is the abbreviation for Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine, a tripeptide (three amino acids (Glycine, Histidine, Lysine) linked together) that naturally occurs in human plasma, saliva and urine. It was first discovered/isolated from plasma in 1973 (Dr. Loren Pickart).

This discovery came specifically from observing human albumin causing old human liver tissue to synthesise proteins more efficiently - as younger tissue would. This led to masses of research into the regenerative properties of GHK, as we will discuss later.

It is primarily found in blood plasma (200ng/mL at age 20) and at lower/trace amounts in saliva and urine.

As you age, GHK levels decline massively - at age 60, concentration in plasma drops to around 80ng/mL. This decline is likely not coincidental with significant decrease in the body's regenerative ability.

GHK exists in T1 collagen and the protein SPARC. Proteolytic enzymes - a oart of your immune defence - release GHK as part of the healing response to tissue injury.

Copper is of course a transition metal element, essential in trace amounts for vital bodily functions; collagen production, antioxidant defence, metabolising iron, energy production, well functioning nervous system and angiogenesis.

GHK has a very high affinity for copper(ii) ions, allowing GHK to systemically transport directly to cells. This, in theory, should have positive effects on the above functions when dosed correctly

GHK binds to copper(ii) ions to form the GHK-Cu complex. This creates the bright blue colour, a more stable complex, and better bioavailability.

These are the primary benefits that people use GHK-Cu for - there are many others that may exist which i have gone much more in depth on under mechanisms of action. i didnt include many of them here because research is more limited and pathways are more complex. Please read the entirety of mechanisms of action for an in depth look at all effects of GHK-Cu. It is quite long, but well worth the read in my opinion, as well as independent research.

Skincare and Anti-aging
- increases collagen production up to 70%
- reduces wrinkle volume by up to 56%
- enhances elastin production
- enhanced tissue remodelling/repair


Wound Healing
- 30-50% faster healing of tissue
- potentially reduced scarring
- reduced inflammation

Hair Growth
- increases follicle size
- comparable efficiency to 5% minoxidil in some cases

GHK-Cu has a variety of complex and synergistic mechanisms of action at both cellular and molecular levels. I've separated these into how each benefit listed above may come about:

direct fibroblast activation:
- GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblasts to increase production of mRNA for collagen synthesis
- upregulates type I and type III collagen genes
- selectively stimulates collagen synthesis at concentrations as low as 0.01-1 nM without affecting non collagen protein synthesis

TGF-β pathway modulation
- GHK-Cu activates the TGF-β pathway, the primary regulator of collagen production
- GHK-Cu restored TGF-β activity to normal levels in COPD patients
- locally REDUCES TGF-β secretion during wound healing in order to prevent scarring


copper as an enzyme cofactor

- copper(ii) ion in GHK-Cu acts as a cofactor for enzymes lysyl oxidase and lysyl hydroxylase
- these enzymes create links between collagen fibres aiding in stability and strength
- lysyl oxidase creates the cross links that give skin tensile strength
- one of the primary reasons GHK-Cu is so much more effective than GHK alone


miscellaneous support
- increases production of decorin - proteoglycan that regulates organisation of collagen fibrils
- stimulates production of glycoaminoglycan which gives skin volume and aids in a hydrated look

one of my favourite mechanisms of this compound:

MMPs are enzymes that break down collagen and other ECM proteins. they are improtant in the role of tissue remodelling - they remove old and/or damaged collagen. of course this means too much MMP activity can lead to accelerated aging and skin damage.

GHK-Cu simultaneously stimulates MMPs when required for collagen/scar tissue removal and increases TIMPs (MMP inhibitors) to prevent excessive breakdown as described above.

in damaged skin, GHK-Cu increases MMPs to clear damaged proteins, while in healthy skin it increases TIMPs to protect these very same proteins while they are healthy
its almost like an intelligent tissue remodelling system

phase 1 - inflammation/hemostasis:

chemoattraction:
GHK-Cu acts as a potent chemoattractant for immune cells by attracting mast cells and macrophages to the wound site, releasing growth factors and cytokines that initiate healing

anti-inflammatory regulation:
- reduces inflammatory cytokines:
TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α)
IL-6 (interleukin-6)
- activates NFκB pathway suppression - NFκB is an inflammatory regulator
- prevents chronic inflammation without hindering immune response

phase 2 - proliferation:

angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation):
- upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) gene expression
- stimulates bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) production
- new capillaries bring oxygen and nutrients to tissue

fibroblast proliferation:
- increases fibroblast migration and proliferation at tissue site
- increases production of ECM proteins
- improves integrin β1 expression (integrins are proteins that anchor cells to the ECM)

keratinocyte migration:
- promotes re-epithelialization
- peratinocytes migrate across the wound bed to close the gap

phase 3 - remodeling:

anti-fibrotic action:
REDUCES TGF-β1 during this phase to prevent excessive scarring
promotes organized collagen deposition rather than random scar tissue formation
downregulates pro-fibrotic genes

Sscar tissue removal:
stimulates MMP production to break down disorganized scar collagen and replace it with organised
this is why GHK-Cu treated wounds have better cosmetic outcomes

special case - diabetic wounds:

in diabetics, GHK-Cu increased GSH and ascorbic acid levels at wound sites
40% increase in wound closure and 27% decrease in infection in clinical trials

follicle size increase:

GHK-Cu increases hair follicle size by stimulating cell proliferation in the follicle bulb, leading to thicker hairs. this was documented in vitro with dermal papilla cells

anagen phase extension:

the hair growth cycle has three phases: anagen, catagen, telogen
GHK-Cu extends the anagen phase, keeping hair in active growth longer

Scalp Circulation:

promoting angiogenesis (via VEGF), GHK-Cu increases blood flow to the scalp, increasing level of oxygen and nutrients to cells, supporting metabolic demands

Anti-Inflammatory Effects:

reduces scalp inflammation that can damage follicles, and suppresses TNF-α and IL-6, which are elevated in androgenetic alopecia. these combine to create a healthier overall environment for follicles

Growth Factor Stimulation:

increases production of growth factors that support follicle health
- IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) and FGF-7 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 7)
note; the interactions here are complicated and i still haven't researched enough to fully understand it, but it seems to regulate IGF-1 among other growth factors in a way similar to MMP regulation - using 'context' to either increase or decrease levels depending on the situation. this is also true for a few other interactions

Mechanism vs Minoxidil:

minoxidil primarily works by opening potassium channels and increasing blood flow
GHK-Cu works through growth factor upregulation, gene expression modulation, and structural support
they are fundamentally different mechanisms hence why some people respond better or simply differently to each

the connectivity map discovery:

using the Broad Institute's connectivity map, GHK-Cu's effects on gene expression were analysed, finding that GHK-Cu modulates approximately 4,000 genes (31.2% of the tested human genome). a common view is that it works as a sort of reset, allowing aged cells to revert back to a younger expression profile

genes upregulated:

- DNA repair genes (47): aids in fixing accumulated dna damage
- antioxidant enzyme genes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione-related enzymes
- tissue repair genes: collagen, elastin, decorin, ECM proteins
- growth factor genes: VEGF, TGF-β, PDGF, FGF family
- stem cell activation genes: promotes stem cell differentiation toward repair

genes downregulated:

- inflammatory genes: TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, NFκB pathway components
- fibrotic genes: excessive TGF-β1, scarring factors
- fibrinogen synthesis genes: reduces clotting pathway overactivation
- cancer-associated genes: including some involved in metastasis (particularly metastatic colon cancer)

epigenetic effects:

GHK-Cu works through epigenetic modulation as opposed to full on genetic mutation. this allows for reversible and more readily targeted effects - like turning a gene up or down rather than changing it completely

clinical validation - COPD study:
In emphysema patients, gene expression profiles were severely altered
GHK-Cu reversed these changes, particularly in the TGF-β pathway
Genes involved in tissue repair were upregulated, inflammatory genes downregulated
This validated the Connectivity Map predictions in actual diseased tissue
Result: Cellular "rejuvenation" at the genetic level—the cell behaves younger.

superoxide dismutase (SOD):

GHK-Cu has SOD-mimetic activity, meaning it acts like the enzyme superoxide dismutase. it converts superoxide radicals (O₂⁻) into hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂). on a molar basis, GHK-Cu has between 1 and 3% of the activity of native Cu-Zn SOD enzyme, so it clearly isn't going to have ridiculous effects in this area, but a notable benefit albeit a marginal one

catalase:

GHK-Cu increases expression of catalase which breaks down H₂O₂ into water and oxygen, completing the antioxidant pathway: O₂⁻ → H₂O₂ → H₂O + O₂. this protects against both superoxide and peroxide damage

glutathione system:

upregulates (GSH) levels, the body's primary antioxidant important for neutralizing a wide range of free radicals and reactives.
this is significant in diabetic wounds with high oxidative stress, as described in the earlier section on this

NFκB pathway inhibition:

GHK-Cu inhibits activation of NFκB p65 which is a transcription factor driving inflammation
- reduces expression of cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
NFκB activation is also correlated with aging and cancer development - more on this later

p38 MAPK Modulation:

- blocks activation of p38 MAPK (mitogen activated protein kinase)
- responds to stress and triggers inflammatory responses leading to less cellular stress caused by inflammation

Copper Regulation:

GHK-Cu chelates copper, preventing free copper from participating in fenton reactions
- free copper can catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals
copper bound in the GHK-Cu complex is "safe" and bioavailable without toxicity - more later

VEGF upregulation:

GHK-Cu increases expression of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)
- VEGF is the primary regulator of blood vessel formation, signalling endothelial cells to proliferate and migrate

bFGF stimulation:

increases basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) production and works with VEGF to promote angiogenesis
- also has anti-apoptotic effects (prevents cell death) in endothelial cells

endothelial cell migration:

GHK-Cu acts as a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, promoting their migration toward areas needing vascularisation. this increases expression of cell adhesion molecules needed for vessel formation

clinical significance:
In wound healing: New blood vessels bring oxygen and nutrients to healing tissue
In ischemic conditions: Can help restore blood flow to oxygen-deprived areas
In skin: Better circulation = healthier, more vibrant appearance
Result: Improved tissue oxygenation, nutrient delivery, waste removal.



nerve growth factor (NGF) production:

GHK-Cu stimulates production of NGF and some other neurotrophic factors, supporting neuron survival and function. this improves nerve recovery and regrowth after injury and potentially improves formation of new nerve cells/synapses, improving cognition
axon regeneration:

increases migration of hematogenous cells into nerve repair sites
promotes growth of myelinated nerve fibers, which carry signals much faster (potentially orders of magnituted faster)
increases schwann cell count - these create the myelin sheath around the axon of nerve cells in the peripheral nervous system allowing for saltatory conduction

integrin expression:

upregulates integrins that help neurones bind and navigate extracellular matrix

gene expression effects:

modulates genes related to nervous system function
- anti-anxiety effects demonstrated in animal models

DISCLAIMER: this is preliminary research and should not be relied upon. education and hypothetical only.


metastasis gene downregulation:


gene expression signatures in metastatic colon cancer showed GHK-Cu downregulates pro-metastatic genes, reducing expression of genes associated with cancer spread and invasion - this is particularly effective against genes with the metastasis-prone signature

anti-proliferative effects:

GHK-Cu showed anti-tumor activity in sarcoma-180 tumour models, more so when combined with vitamin C. current theory suggests this may work by modulating copper availability in tumour cells

NFκB suppression:

GHK-Cu may also have some role in cancer prevention by inhibitng NFκB activation

uncertainty:

exact anti-cancer mechanisms are not fully understood
as i said earlier, this is preliminary and under-researched

stem cell mobilization:

- promotes differentiation of stem cells towards repair phenotypes
- increases expression of genes related to stem cell activation
- may help maintain stem cell populations as you age

cellular senescence reduction:

modulates pathways associated with cellular senescence, helping to clear senescent cells or prevent their accumulation in a similar way to MMPs like earlier. senescent cells produce inflammatory factors (SASP) that accelerate aging so it is obviously beneficial to reduce this as much as possible

replicative vitality:

GHK-Cu restores replicative capacity to fibroblasts damaged by radiation, suggesting it can reverse some forms of cellular damage

TGF-β activation​
fibroblast signaling​
increased collagen production​
Lysyl oxidase cofactor​
collagen cross linking​
skin strength​
MMP/TIMP balance​
ECM remodeling​
tissue renewal​
VEGF upregulation​
endothelial cells​
angiogenesis​
NFκB inhibition​
inflammation and related effects​
decreased chronic inflammation​
SOD-mimetic activity​
free radical scavenging​
antioxidant protection​
Gene expression modulation​
4k+ genes​
potentially innumerable​
Chemoattractant action​
immune cell recruitment​
wound healing​
Integrin expression​
cell to ECM adhesion​
cell migration​
Growth factor stimulation​
VEGF, FGF, TGF-β, etc.​
healing​








- overall very safe peptide without any serious side effects
- lethal dose is hundreds of times larger than what you'd be taking

side effects include:

topical: irritation
injectable: pain and bruisong locally at injection site, nausea, dizziness

all temporary and minor

topical is fda approved, injectable is not and experimental


Factor​
Topical​
Subq injection​
bioavailability​
low​
high - 10-20x topical​
speed​
8 weeks for significant benefits​
4 weeks​
systemic​
no​
yes​
cost​
low​
moderate​
convenience​
very high​
moderate​
pain​
none​
low​
skill​
none​
moderate - see my guide​
storage​
none​
fridge​
honestly just inject, not much else to it





what to look for:
COAs
high purity
<1 EU/mg endotoxin
heavy metal testing
cold pack shipping, especially if not lyophilised

what to be careful of:

low prices vs. alternatives
no COA
COA that doesnt match batch
no contact info
bad packaging
unrealistic claims

i havent decided yet whether im going to include peptide synergies here or make another thread dedicated to them, so blank for now

i have a draft of this section so if you are very interested in anything specific let me know

1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.




If you feel I have missed anything out, please let me know and I will include it.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated, and if there is anything you would like to see guides on - be it a different peptide or something unrelated - let me know.

Apologies also if the formatting is a bit inconsistent throughout, this took a while so i did some on my phone and some on computer.

I removed the section on dosages, please PM if you are unsure about this. I decided against instructing people dosages to use publicly.

Thanks, Cynic


@Nephilim
@Blackpillirony
@gameofb0nes
short tag list for now :peeposhy:

dumping our limited brainpower into a thread on an extremely elementary peptide
hella mirin
 
dumping our limited brainpower into a thread on an extremely elementary peptide
hella mirin
honestly if you'd said limited time i'd have agreed, this thread didn't take much brain power

however you clearly didn't read the thread, because lots of what i talked about is not elementary in the slightest - at least to the average user here

also, using the word elementary instead of simple or some other word thats actually commonly used doesn't make you clever, the opposite if anything

dont engage with me
 
bump, suggestions for next one?
 
.·*´¯`*·.¸¸*·.·.·.@Cynic*¸¸.·*´¯`*·.

Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. This is not medical advice and is purely educational content set in a hypothetical scenario. I do not take responsibility for any information found in this guide or any replies. Proceed at your own risk.


This is the first of a series of threads dedicated to peptides that have become increasingly popular. In particular with the rise in popularity of BP/LM on tiktok and other social media in recent years.

Please note this guide covers both topical and injectable GHK-Cu. I have labelled this in most instances but there is bound to be some where you will use the context to decide.
If this is your first time using peptides, please see my thread on safely storing and administering before you continue:






GHK is the abbreviation for Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine, a tripeptide (three amino acids (Glycine, Histidine, Lysine) linked together) that naturally occurs in human plasma, saliva and urine. It was first discovered/isolated from plasma in 1973 (Dr. Loren Pickart).

This discovery came specifically from observing human albumin causing old human liver tissue to synthesise proteins more efficiently - as younger tissue would. This led to masses of research into the regenerative properties of GHK, as we will discuss later.

It is primarily found in blood plasma (200ng/mL at age 20) and at lower/trace amounts in saliva and urine.

As you age, GHK levels decline massively - at age 60, concentration in plasma drops to around 80ng/mL. This decline is likely not coincidental with significant decrease in the body's regenerative ability.

GHK exists in T1 collagen and the protein SPARC. Proteolytic enzymes - a oart of your immune defence - release GHK as part of the healing response to tissue injury.

Copper is of course a transition metal element, essential in trace amounts for vital bodily functions; collagen production, antioxidant defence, metabolising iron, energy production, well functioning nervous system and angiogenesis.

GHK has a very high affinity for copper(ii) ions, allowing GHK to systemically transport directly to cells. This, in theory, should have positive effects on the above functions when dosed correctly

GHK binds to copper(ii) ions to form the GHK-Cu complex. This creates the bright blue colour, a more stable complex, and better bioavailability.

These are the primary benefits that people use GHK-Cu for - there are many others that may exist which i have gone much more in depth on under mechanisms of action. i didnt include many of them here because research is more limited and pathways are more complex. Please read the entirety of mechanisms of action for an in depth look at all effects of GHK-Cu. It is quite long, but well worth the read in my opinion, as well as independent research.

Skincare and Anti-aging
- increases collagen production up to 70%
- reduces wrinkle volume by up to 56%
- enhances elastin production
- enhanced tissue remodelling/repair


Wound Healing
- 30-50% faster healing of tissue
- potentially reduced scarring
- reduced inflammation

Hair Growth
- increases follicle size
- comparable efficiency to 5% minoxidil in some cases

GHK-Cu has a variety of complex and synergistic mechanisms of action at both cellular and molecular levels. I've separated these into how each benefit listed above may come about:

direct fibroblast activation:
- GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblasts to increase production of mRNA for collagen synthesis
- upregulates type I and type III collagen genes
- selectively stimulates collagen synthesis at concentrations as low as 0.01-1 nM without affecting non collagen protein synthesis

TGF-β pathway modulation
- GHK-Cu activates the TGF-β pathway, the primary regulator of collagen production
- GHK-Cu restored TGF-β activity to normal levels in COPD patients
- locally REDUCES TGF-β secretion during wound healing in order to prevent scarring


copper as an enzyme cofactor

- copper(ii) ion in GHK-Cu acts as a cofactor for enzymes lysyl oxidase and lysyl hydroxylase
- these enzymes create links between collagen fibres aiding in stability and strength
- lysyl oxidase creates the cross links that give skin tensile strength
- one of the primary reasons GHK-Cu is so much more effective than GHK alone


miscellaneous support
- increases production of decorin - proteoglycan that regulates organisation of collagen fibrils
- stimulates production of glycoaminoglycan which gives skin volume and aids in a hydrated look

one of my favourite mechanisms of this compound:

MMPs are enzymes that break down collagen and other ECM proteins. they are improtant in the role of tissue remodelling - they remove old and/or damaged collagen. of course this means too much MMP activity can lead to accelerated aging and skin damage.

GHK-Cu simultaneously stimulates MMPs when required for collagen/scar tissue removal and increases TIMPs (MMP inhibitors) to prevent excessive breakdown as described above.

in damaged skin, GHK-Cu increases MMPs to clear damaged proteins, while in healthy skin it increases TIMPs to protect these very same proteins while they are healthy
its almost like an intelligent tissue remodelling system

phase 1 - inflammation/hemostasis:

chemoattraction:
GHK-Cu acts as a potent chemoattractant for immune cells by attracting mast cells and macrophages to the wound site, releasing growth factors and cytokines that initiate healing

anti-inflammatory regulation:
- reduces inflammatory cytokines:
TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α)
IL-6 (interleukin-6)
- activates NFκB pathway suppression - NFκB is an inflammatory regulator
- prevents chronic inflammation without hindering immune response

phase 2 - proliferation:

angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation):
- upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) gene expression
- stimulates bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) production
- new capillaries bring oxygen and nutrients to tissue

fibroblast proliferation:
- increases fibroblast migration and proliferation at tissue site
- increases production of ECM proteins
- improves integrin β1 expression (integrins are proteins that anchor cells to the ECM)

keratinocyte migration:
- promotes re-epithelialization
- peratinocytes migrate across the wound bed to close the gap

phase 3 - remodeling:

anti-fibrotic action:
REDUCES TGF-β1 during this phase to prevent excessive scarring
promotes organized collagen deposition rather than random scar tissue formation
downregulates pro-fibrotic genes

Sscar tissue removal:
stimulates MMP production to break down disorganized scar collagen and replace it with organised
this is why GHK-Cu treated wounds have better cosmetic outcomes

special case - diabetic wounds:

in diabetics, GHK-Cu increased GSH and ascorbic acid levels at wound sites
40% increase in wound closure and 27% decrease in infection in clinical trials

follicle size increase:

GHK-Cu increases hair follicle size by stimulating cell proliferation in the follicle bulb, leading to thicker hairs. this was documented in vitro with dermal papilla cells

anagen phase extension:

the hair growth cycle has three phases: anagen, catagen, telogen
GHK-Cu extends the anagen phase, keeping hair in active growth longer

Scalp Circulation:

promoting angiogenesis (via VEGF), GHK-Cu increases blood flow to the scalp, increasing level of oxygen and nutrients to cells, supporting metabolic demands

Anti-Inflammatory Effects:

reduces scalp inflammation that can damage follicles, and suppresses TNF-α and IL-6, which are elevated in androgenetic alopecia. these combine to create a healthier overall environment for follicles

Growth Factor Stimulation:

increases production of growth factors that support follicle health
- IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) and FGF-7 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 7)
note; the interactions here are complicated and i still haven't researched enough to fully understand it, but it seems to regulate IGF-1 among other growth factors in a way similar to MMP regulation - using 'context' to either increase or decrease levels depending on the situation. this is also true for a few other interactions

Mechanism vs Minoxidil:

minoxidil primarily works by opening potassium channels and increasing blood flow
GHK-Cu works through growth factor upregulation, gene expression modulation, and structural support
they are fundamentally different mechanisms hence why some people respond better or simply differently to each

the connectivity map discovery:

using the Broad Institute's connectivity map, GHK-Cu's effects on gene expression were analysed, finding that GHK-Cu modulates approximately 4,000 genes (31.2% of the tested human genome). a common view is that it works as a sort of reset, allowing aged cells to revert back to a younger expression profile

genes upregulated:

- DNA repair genes (47): aids in fixing accumulated dna damage
- antioxidant enzyme genes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione-related enzymes
- tissue repair genes: collagen, elastin, decorin, ECM proteins
- growth factor genes: VEGF, TGF-β, PDGF, FGF family
- stem cell activation genes: promotes stem cell differentiation toward repair

genes downregulated:

- inflammatory genes: TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, NFκB pathway components
- fibrotic genes: excessive TGF-β1, scarring factors
- fibrinogen synthesis genes: reduces clotting pathway overactivation
- cancer-associated genes: including some involved in metastasis (particularly metastatic colon cancer)

epigenetic effects:

GHK-Cu works through epigenetic modulation as opposed to full on genetic mutation. this allows for reversible and more readily targeted effects - like turning a gene up or down rather than changing it completely

clinical validation - COPD study:
In emphysema patients, gene expression profiles were severely altered
GHK-Cu reversed these changes, particularly in the TGF-β pathway
Genes involved in tissue repair were upregulated, inflammatory genes downregulated
This validated the Connectivity Map predictions in actual diseased tissue
Result: Cellular "rejuvenation" at the genetic level—the cell behaves younger.

superoxide dismutase (SOD):

GHK-Cu has SOD-mimetic activity, meaning it acts like the enzyme superoxide dismutase. it converts superoxide radicals (O₂⁻) into hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂). on a molar basis, GHK-Cu has between 1 and 3% of the activity of native Cu-Zn SOD enzyme, so it clearly isn't going to have ridiculous effects in this area, but a notable benefit albeit a marginal one

catalase:

GHK-Cu increases expression of catalase which breaks down H₂O₂ into water and oxygen, completing the antioxidant pathway: O₂⁻ → H₂O₂ → H₂O + O₂. this protects against both superoxide and peroxide damage

glutathione system:

upregulates (GSH) levels, the body's primary antioxidant important for neutralizing a wide range of free radicals and reactives.
this is significant in diabetic wounds with high oxidative stress, as described in the earlier section on this

NFκB pathway inhibition:

GHK-Cu inhibits activation of NFκB p65 which is a transcription factor driving inflammation
- reduces expression of cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
NFκB activation is also correlated with aging and cancer development - more on this later

p38 MAPK Modulation:

- blocks activation of p38 MAPK (mitogen activated protein kinase)
- responds to stress and triggers inflammatory responses leading to less cellular stress caused by inflammation

Copper Regulation:

GHK-Cu chelates copper, preventing free copper from participating in fenton reactions
- free copper can catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals
copper bound in the GHK-Cu complex is "safe" and bioavailable without toxicity - more later

VEGF upregulation:

GHK-Cu increases expression of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)
- VEGF is the primary regulator of blood vessel formation, signalling endothelial cells to proliferate and migrate

bFGF stimulation:

increases basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) production and works with VEGF to promote angiogenesis
- also has anti-apoptotic effects (prevents cell death) in endothelial cells

endothelial cell migration:

GHK-Cu acts as a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, promoting their migration toward areas needing vascularisation. this increases expression of cell adhesion molecules needed for vessel formation

clinical significance:
In wound healing: New blood vessels bring oxygen and nutrients to healing tissue
In ischemic conditions: Can help restore blood flow to oxygen-deprived areas
In skin: Better circulation = healthier, more vibrant appearance
Result: Improved tissue oxygenation, nutrient delivery, waste removal.



nerve growth factor (NGF) production:

GHK-Cu stimulates production of NGF and some other neurotrophic factors, supporting neuron survival and function. this improves nerve recovery and regrowth after injury and potentially improves formation of new nerve cells/synapses, improving cognition
axon regeneration:

increases migration of hematogenous cells into nerve repair sites
promotes growth of myelinated nerve fibers, which carry signals much faster (potentially orders of magnituted faster)
increases schwann cell count - these create the myelin sheath around the axon of nerve cells in the peripheral nervous system allowing for saltatory conduction

integrin expression:

upregulates integrins that help neurones bind and navigate extracellular matrix

gene expression effects:

modulates genes related to nervous system function
- anti-anxiety effects demonstrated in animal models

DISCLAIMER: this is preliminary research and should not be relied upon. education and hypothetical only.


metastasis gene downregulation:


gene expression signatures in metastatic colon cancer showed GHK-Cu downregulates pro-metastatic genes, reducing expression of genes associated with cancer spread and invasion - this is particularly effective against genes with the metastasis-prone signature

anti-proliferative effects:

GHK-Cu showed anti-tumor activity in sarcoma-180 tumour models, more so when combined with vitamin C. current theory suggests this may work by modulating copper availability in tumour cells

NFκB suppression:

GHK-Cu may also have some role in cancer prevention by inhibitng NFκB activation

uncertainty:

exact anti-cancer mechanisms are not fully understood
as i said earlier, this is preliminary and under-researched

stem cell mobilization:

- promotes differentiation of stem cells towards repair phenotypes
- increases expression of genes related to stem cell activation
- may help maintain stem cell populations as you age

cellular senescence reduction:

modulates pathways associated with cellular senescence, helping to clear senescent cells or prevent their accumulation in a similar way to MMPs like earlier. senescent cells produce inflammatory factors (SASP) that accelerate aging so it is obviously beneficial to reduce this as much as possible

replicative vitality:

GHK-Cu restores replicative capacity to fibroblasts damaged by radiation, suggesting it can reverse some forms of cellular damage

TGF-β activation​
fibroblast signaling​
increased collagen production​
Lysyl oxidase cofactor​
collagen cross linking​
skin strength​
MMP/TIMP balance​
ECM remodeling​
tissue renewal​
VEGF upregulation​
endothelial cells​
angiogenesis​
NFκB inhibition​
inflammation and related effects​
decreased chronic inflammation​
SOD-mimetic activity​
free radical scavenging​
antioxidant protection​
Gene expression modulation​
4k+ genes​
potentially innumerable​
Chemoattractant action​
immune cell recruitment​
wound healing​
Integrin expression​
cell to ECM adhesion​
cell migration​
Growth factor stimulation​
VEGF, FGF, TGF-β, etc.​
healing​








- overall very safe peptide without any serious side effects
- lethal dose is hundreds of times larger than what you'd be taking

side effects include:

topical: irritation
injectable: pain and bruisong locally at injection site, nausea, dizziness

all temporary and minor

topical is fda approved, injectable is not and experimental


Factor​
Topical​
Subq injection​
bioavailability​
low​
high - 10-20x topical​
speed​
8 weeks for significant benefits​
4 weeks​
systemic​
no​
yes​
cost​
low​
moderate​
convenience​
very high​
moderate​
pain​
none​
low​
skill​
none​
moderate - see my guide​
storage​
none​
fridge​
honestly just inject, not much else to it





what to look for:
COAs
high purity
<1 EU/mg endotoxin
heavy metal testing
cold pack shipping, especially if not lyophilised

what to be careful of:

low prices vs. alternatives
no COA
COA that doesnt match batch
no contact info
bad packaging
unrealistic claims

i havent decided yet whether im going to include peptide synergies here or make another thread dedicated to them, so blank for now

i have a draft of this section so if you are very interested in anything specific let me know

1. Pickart L. A Tripeptide from Human Serum Which Enhances the Growth of Neoplastic Hepatocytes and the Survival of Normal Hepatocytes [Ph.D. thesis]. University of California, San Francisco; 1973.
2. Pickart L, Margolina A. Regenerative and Protective Actions of the GHK-Cu Peptide in the Light of the New Gene Data. Int J Mol Sci. 2018;19(7):1987. doi:10.3390/ijms19071987
3. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. The Human Tripeptide GHK-Cu in Prevention of Oxidative Stress and Degenerative Conditions of Aging. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012;2012:324832. doi:10.1155/2012/324832
4. Pickart L, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Res Int. 2015;2015:648108. doi:10.1155/2015/648108
5. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK-Cu may Prevent Oxidative Stress in Skin by Regulating Copper. Cosmetics. 2015;2(3):236-247. doi:10.3390/cosmetics2030236
6. Pickart L, Freedman JH, Loker WJ, et al. Growth-modulating plasma tripeptide may function by facilitating copper uptake into cells. Nature. 1980;288:715-717. doi:10.1038/288715a0
7. Pickart L, Margolina A. The Effect of the Human Plasma Molecule GHK-Cu on Stem Cell Actions. OBM Geriatrics. 2018;2(3):009. doi:10.21926/obm.geriatr.1803009
8. Maquart FX, Pickart L, Laurent M, et al. Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by GHK-Cu2+. FEBS Lett. 1988;238:343-346. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80509-x
9. Pollard JD, Quan S, Kang T, Koch RJ. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Growth Factors. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2005;7(1):27-31. doi:10.1001/archfaci.7.1.27
10. Badenhorst T, Svirskis D, Merrilees M, et al. Effects of GHK-Cu on MMP, Collagen and Facial Wrinkles. J Aging Sci. 2016;4:166. doi:10.4172/2329-8847.1000166
11. Simeon A, Monier F, Emonard H, et al. Expression and Activation of MMPs in Wounds. J Invest Dermatol. 1999;112:957-964. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1999.00606.x
12. Lee JH, Yeo S, Moon G, et al. Tripeptide-Copper Hydrogel for Infected Wound Healing. Biomaterials Research. 2025;29:0139. doi:10.34133/bmr.0139
13. Arul V, Gopinath D, Gomathi K, Jayakumar R. Biotinylated GHK for wound healing in rats. J Biomed Mater Res B. 2005;73(2):383-391. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.30246
14. Pyo HK, Yoo HG, Won CH, et al. Effect of tripeptide-copper on hair growth in vitro. Arch Pharm Res. 2007;30(7):834-839. doi:10.1007/BF02977603
15. Lu Z, Wang X, Ren Y, et al. Ionic liquid microemulsions for topical delivery. J Control Release. 2023;363:720-733. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.10.004
16. Maquart FX, Bellon G, Chaqour B, et al. In vivo stimulation of connective tissue by GHK-Cu2+. J Clin Invest. 1993;92(5):2368-2376. doi:10.1172/JCI116842
17. Gurjala AN, Liu TA, Schmerer AB, et al. Effects of Copper Tripeptide on Laser-Resurfaced Skin. Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2006;8(4):252-259. doi:10.1001/archfaci.8.4.252
18. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK on Gene Expression Relevant to Nervous System. Brain Sci. 2017;7(2):20. doi:10.3390/brainsci7020020
19. Campbell JD, McDonough JE, Zeskind JE, et al. Gene expression signature of COPD reversal by GHK. Genome Med. 2012;4(8):67. doi:10.1186/gm367
20. Kang YA, Choi HR, Na JI, et al. Copper-GHK increases integrin expression. Arch Dermatol Res. 2009;301(4):301-306. doi:10.1007/s00403-009-0924-2
21. Gul NY, Topal A, Cangul IT, Yanik K. Effects of tripeptide-copper on wound healing in rabbits. Vet Dermatol. 2008;19(1):7-14. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00647.x
22. Hong Y, Downey T, Eu KW, et al. Metastasis-prone signature implications. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2010;27(2):83-90. doi:10.1007/s10585-010-9305-4
23. Kimoto E, Tanaka H, Gyotoku J, et al. Enhancement of antitumor activity of ascorbate by copper:GHK. Cancer Res. 1983;43:824-828.
24. Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK and DNA: Resetting the Genome to Health. BioMed Res Int. 2014;2014:151479. doi:10.1155/2014/151479
25. Lamb J. The Connectivity Map: A new tool for biomedical research. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007;7:54-60. doi:10.1038/nrc2044
26. Simeon A, Emonard H, Hornebeck W, Maquart FX. GHK-Cu2+ stimulates MMP-2 expression. Life Sci. 2000;67(18):2257-2265. doi:10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00765-2
27. Wegrzynowska-Drzymalska K, Chelstowska B, et al. Biological Role of Copper Tripeptide Complexes. Molecules. 2021;26(20):6190. doi:10.3390/molecules26206190
28. GHK-Cu Dosage Protocols. Peptide Dosages. 2025. https://peptidedosages.com/single-peptide-dosages/ghk-cu-50mg-vial-dosage-protocol/
29. GHK-CU Peptide Injection Dosage Guide. SeekPeptides. https://www.seekpeptides.com/blog/articles/ghk-cu-peptide-injection-dosage
30. GHK Cu Injection: Clinical Overview. Salhab Pharmacy. https://www.salhabpharmacy.com/ghk-cu-injection/
31. Wang Y, Zhang D, Ashraf M, et al. Microneedle-Mediated Delivery of Copper Peptide. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(9):3028-3036. doi:10.1002/jps.24479
32. Dermaroller versus dermaroller with copper peptide in acne scars. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2025.
33. Copper Peptide Microneedling: Advanced Facial Rejuvenation. The London PRP Clinic. 2025.
34. Bioavailability comparison of topical versus subcutaneous GHK-Cu administration. Compiled from multiple clinical studies and pharmacokinetic analyses.

35. Permeation studies of copper peptide through stratum corneum. Derived from transdermal delivery research and skin penetration assays.
36. Maquart FX et al. (1988). Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblasts by GHK-Cu. FEBS Letters.
37. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2015). GHK Peptide as Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways. BioMed Res Int.
38. Campbell JD et al. (2012). Gene expression signature of emphysema reversal by GHK. Genome Med.
39. Pickart L, Margolina A. (2018). Regenerative and Protective Actions of GHK-Cu Peptide. Int J Mol Sci.




If you feel I have missed anything out, please let me know and I will include it.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated, and if there is anything you would like to see guides on - be it a different peptide or something unrelated - let me know.

Apologies also if the formatting is a bit inconsistent throughout, this took a while so i did some on my phone and some on computer.

I removed the section on dosages, please PM if you are unsure about this. I decided against instructing people dosages to use publicly.

Thanks, Cynic


@Nephilim
@Blackpillirony
@gameofb0nes
short tag list for now :peeposhy:

Is this a good substitute for a balanced diet?
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top