AOD-9604: Precision Lipolysis Without Growth Effects
Investigating the C-terminal fragment of hGH and its selective ability to mobilize fat stores.
Background
AOD-9604 is a modified peptide derived from the C-terminal region of human growth hormone (hGH), specifically residues 177–191. Development was motivated by a specific research question: can the lipolytic activity of hGH be separated from its broader anabolic, IGF-1-generating, and glucose-affecting activities? If so, the resulting fragment would be a far more precise research tool for studying adipose biology than full-length GH.
AOD-9604 is the molecule that answered yes — at least in terms of research pharmacology. It produces adipose-directed effects without measurable activation of the growth hormone receptor in standard assays.
Molecular profile
- Sequence: Tyr-Leu-Arg-Ile-Val-Gln-Cys-Arg-Ser-Val-Glu-Gly-Ser-Cys-Gly-Phe (16 aa)
- Modification: N-terminal tyrosine added to native hGH(177-191); disulfide bond between Cys-7 and Cys-14
- Molecular weight: ~1,817 Da
- CAS: 221231-10-3
- Developer: Monash University / Metabolic Pharmaceuticals (Australia)
Mechanism: adipose-selective lipolysis
Unlike full hGH — which acts through the growth hormone receptor (GHR), a dimerizing cytokine-family receptor that activates JAK2/STAT5 signaling and drives hepatic IGF-1 generation — AOD-9604 appears to work through distinct pathways:
- No measurable GHR activation in standard reporter assays at pharmacologically relevant concentrations
- No IGF-1 elevation in published studies — a critical distinction from full hGH
- No significant glucose-level perturbation — unlike hGH, which induces insulin resistance at higher doses
- Hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) activation — promotes triglyceride breakdown in adipocytes
- β3-adrenergic receptor upregulation — increases receptor density and response to catecholamines
- Inhibition of lipogenesis — reduces fatty acid synthesis in parallel with promoting breakdown
- Proposed distinct receptor — some research suggests a fat-specific receptor or mechanism, though the identity remains a subject of investigation
What laboratories typically study
- Adipocyte lipolysis assays — free fatty acid (glycerol) release from 3T3-L1 or primary adipocytes
- HSL activity — phosphorylated HSL immunoblots, enzymatic activity assays
- Adipogenesis — preadipocyte differentiation, lipid droplet accumulation (Oil Red O staining)
- Lipogenic gene expression — FAS (fatty acid synthase), ACC (acetyl-CoA carboxylase), SREBP1c
- β-adrenergic biology — receptor density by radioligand binding, cAMP response to catecholamines
- DIO rodent models — adipose tissue characterization, body composition, metabolic parameters
- Head-to-head vs hGH — demonstrating lipolysis-specific effect without IGF-1 elevation
- Cartilage research — some studies explore AOD-9604 effects on chondrocyte biology independent of systemic GH axis
What AOD-9604 is not
Given marketing claims sometimes found in non-research contexts, clarification is useful:
- Not equivalent to hGH — lacks anabolic and IGF-1-generating effects
- Not a GH secretagogue — does not stimulate pituitary GH release
- Not a myostatin inhibitor
- Not a systemic anabolic agent — research data specifically shows absence of growth-promoting effects
Its research value is precisely its adipose selectivity.
Handling and quality
- Supplied as lyophilized powder (typical research format 5 mg)
- Store lyophilized at -20°C, protected from light
- Reconstitute with sterile/bacteriostatic water
- Disulfide bond integrity is important — avoid harsh reducing conditions during reconstitution
- Reconstituted solution stable ~4 weeks at 2–8°C
- Verify by HPLC (≥99.0%) with MS identity confirmation; request batch COA
Related reading
- /research/aod-9604 — compound profile
- /blog/aod-9604-vs-hgh-fragment-lipolysis-research — fragment comparison
- /category/weight-loss-research — broader category
- /guides/how-to-read-peptide-coa — batch documentation
RUO disclaimer
For laboratory research use only. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Not for human consumption outside approved research settings.