GHK-Cu: The Copper Peptide's Role in Genomic Resetting
GHK-Cu w modelach skóry/komórek dotyczących ekspresji genów i kolagenu; nie mylić z peptydami mitochondrialnymi.
Background
GHK is a tripeptide — glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine — that naturally complexes with divalent copper (Cu²⁺) to form GHK-Cu. First isolated from human plasma in 1973 by Pickart, GHK-Cu has been the subject of five decades of research spanning dermatology, wound healing, oncology, and more recently gene expression and epigenetics. It is one of the best-characterized copper peptides in biological research.
Molecular profile
- Sequence: Gly-His-Lys + Cu²⁺ complex
- Molecular weight: ~340 Da (ligand) + copper ion
- CAS: 49557-75-7 (GHK); 89030-95-5 (GHK-Cu complex)
- Physical form: typically supplied as a blue-hued lyophilized powder due to the copper complex
Mechanism: gene expression and repair
Unlike many repair peptides that act through receptor-mediated signaling, GHK-Cu's research-documented mechanisms span both receptor-independent copper delivery and direct gene-expression modulation.
Transcriptional modulation:
- Published gene-expression studies (notably Pickart and Margolina, 2018) report GHK-Cu modulates expression of approximately 4,000 genes — a figure unusual for small peptides
- Upregulation of genes involved in tissue repair, antioxidant response, and DNA repair
- Downregulation of genes associated with inflammation, cancer progression, and tissue remodeling enzymes
Specific pathways:
- TGF-β1 signaling — modulates fibroblast behavior
- MMP-2 activity — matrix metalloproteinase for tissue remodeling
- Collagen synthesis — stimulates type I and III collagen production in dermal fibroblasts
- Decorin production — influences collagen fibril organization
- Anti-inflammatory — reduces TNF-α, IL-1β in stressed tissue models
- Antioxidant — SOD (superoxide dismutase) upregulation
Copper biology
GHK's affinity for Cu²⁺ is physiologically relevant. Copper is an essential cofactor for:
- Lysyl oxidase (collagen/elastin cross-linking)
- Cytochrome c oxidase (mitochondrial respiration)
- Superoxide dismutase (antioxidant defense)
- Tyrosinase (pigment production)
GHK-Cu serves as a physiological copper-delivery peptide, shuttling copper to where it's needed for these enzymatic processes.
What laboratories typically study
Dermatology and wound healing:
- Dermal fibroblast cultures — collagen, elastin, glycosaminoglycan production
- Full-thickness wound models in diabetic and non-diabetic rodents
- Ex vivo skin explant studies — barrier function, TEWL recovery
- Burn wound healing in porcine models
Hair biology:
- Follicle dermal papilla cell cultures
- 5α-reductase activity modulation
- Hair growth cycle in rodent models
Anti-aging / gene expression:
- Transcriptomic profiling in aged vs young fibroblast comparisons
- Senescence marker studies (SA-β-gal, p16, p21)
- UV-damage repair assays
Oncology research:
- Metastatic gene expression profiling
- Angiogenesis markers in tumor microenvironment studies
Handling and quality
- Supplied as lyophilized powder in 50 mg or 100 mg formats (peptide limited stocks both)
- Color typically blue/blue-violet due to copper complex
- Store lyophilized at -20°C or 2–8°C, light-protected
- Reconstitute with sterile water (not bacteriostatic — the benzyl alcohol can interact with the copper complex in some formulations)
- Reconstituted solution stable ~4 weeks at 2–8°C
- Verify purity by HPLC; mass spectrometry should confirm both ligand mass and copper presence; request batch COA
- Important: loss of blue color after reconstitution may indicate copper dissociation — inspect visually
Related reading
- /research/ghk-cu — compound profile
- /compare/bpc-157-vs-ghk-cu — mechanism comparison
- /compare/ghk-cu-vs-tb-500 — repair-peptide comparison
- /category/healing-and-regeneration-research — broader category
- /category/longevity-and-anti-aging-research — gene-expression research context
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.