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Specimen Atlas of Research Peptides81 plates · MIT
Side-by-side · Research reference

AHK-CuvsIGF-DES

Side-by-side comparison across mechanism, dosage, evidence, side effects, administration, and stack synergies. Citations on every claim where available.

AAnimal-MechanisticHUMAN-REVIEWED14/43 cited
BAnimal-StrongHUMAN-REVIEWED8/60 cited
AHK-Cu
Tripeptide-Copper Complex · Cosmetic
10⁻¹² – 10⁻⁹ MActive range (in vitro)Pyo 2007
Dermal papilla cellsPrimary targetPyo 2007
TopicalRoute
Topical · Scalp / Skin
IGF-DES
IGF-1 Analogue · Truncated N-Terminal
~10×Potency vs IGF-1
ReducedIGFBP binding
ResearchStatus
Injection (local or systemic) · Research protocols onlyBredehöft 2008

01Mechanism of Action

Parameter
AHK-Cu
IGF-DES
Primary target
Dermal papilla cells (DPCs) — specialized fibroblasts in hair follicle morphogenesisPyo 2007
IGF-1 receptor (IGF1R)Shields 2007
Pathway
AHK-Cu → DPC proliferation → VEGF elevation, TGF-β1 suppression → Angiogenesis, follicle elongationPyo 2007
IGF1R activation → PI3K/Akt & MAPK signaling → protein synthesis, proliferation
Downstream effect
Stimulates hair follicle elongation ex vivo, reduces dermal papilla cell apoptosis, elevates Bcl-2/Bax ratio, reduces cleaved caspase-3 and PARPPyo 2007
Enhanced muscle protein synthesis, myoblast differentiation, reduced apoptosis, cell proliferation
Feedback intact?
Unknown — no human endocrine feedback data
Origin
Synthetic tripeptide with Cu²⁺ chelation — alanine substitution variant of GHK-Cu
Synthetic truncation of native IGF-1 — removal of N-terminal Gly-Pro-Glu tripeptideBredehöft 2008
Antibody development

02Dosage Protocols

Parameter
AHK-Cu
IGF-DES
Effective concentration (in vitro)
10⁻¹² – 10⁻⁹ MPyo 2007
Stimulated human hair follicle elongation ex vivo and DPC proliferation in vitro.
Topical formulation
0.001–0.01% (estimated cosmetic range)
No standardized human protocol published — extrapolated from in vitro data.
Frequency
Once or twice daily (topical application)
Variable — daily to multiple times daily in research
Route
Topical — scalp or dermal application
Subcutaneous or intramuscular (local injection favored)
Local delivery maximizes tissue-specific uptake.
Evidence basis
Ex vivo hair follicle / in vitro DPC studiesPyo 2007
Animal models + in vitro only
Duration
Not established — cosmetic protocols typically 8–12 weeks
Research dose range
10–100 ng/mL (in vitro); μg doses (animal models)
Highly context-dependent; no standardized human protocol.
Human data
None — no clinical trials
Half-life
Shorter than IGF-1 due to reduced IGFBP binding
Rapid tissue uptake, limited systemic circulation.

03Metabolic / Fat Loss Evidence

Parameter
AHK-Cu
IGF-DES
Primary mechanism
Indirect via muscle hypertrophy → metabolic rate elevation
Direct lipolysis
Minimal evidence — IGF-1 axis primarily anabolic, not lipolytic
Prostate model
Inhibited BPH cell proliferation when combined with vitamin D3 analogueCrescioli 2002
Context-specific anti-proliferative effect, not fat loss.

04Side Effects & Safety

Parameter
AHK-Cu
IGF-DES
Local irritation
Mild erythema, pruritus at application site (copper peptide class effect)
Copper sensitivity
Rare hypersensitivity reaction in copper-sensitive individuals
Systemic absorption
Minimal via topical route — systemic copper toxicity unlikely at cosmetic doses
Data limitations
No published human safety trials — cosmetic use presumed safe per class precedent (GHK-Cu)
Hypoglycemia risk
Theoretical — IGF-1 axis enhances glucose uptake
Mitogenic risk
Chronic IGF-1 receptor activation may promote cell proliferation, potential tumor growthCrescioli 2002
Injection site reaction
Expected — erythema, irritation, local swelling
Edema / Fluid retention
Possible via sodium retention (IGF-1 axis effect)
Human safety data
Absent — no human trials, all effects theoretical or extrapolated
Unknown long-term effects
No chronic dosing studies in humans; endocrine, metabolic consequences unknown
Absolute Contraindications
AHK-Cu
  • ·Known copper allergy or Wilson's disease
IGF-DES
  • ·Active malignancy or history of cancer (mitogenic risk)
  • ·Pregnancy / lactation (no safety data)
  • ·Hypoglycemia disorders
Relative Contraindications
AHK-Cu
  • ·Broken or inflamed skin (increased absorption risk)
  • ·Concurrent use of other copper-containing formulations
IGF-DES
  • ·Diabetes mellitus (unpredictable glucose effects)
  • ·Renal or hepatic impairment (clearance unknown)
  • ·Edema-prone conditions (heart failure, nephrotic syndrome)

05Administration Protocol

Parameter
AHK-Cu
IGF-DES
1. Topical application
Apply to clean, dry scalp or target dermal area. Typical cosmetic formulations: 0.001–0.01% AHK-Cu in serum or cream base.
Des(1-3)IGF-1 has no approved human protocol. All administration details are derived from animal or in vitro research and should not be construed as medical guidance.
2. Frequency
Once or twice daily. Evening application preferred for overnight contact time.
Sterile water or bacteriostatic water per research protocol. Gently swirl; do not shake. Store reconstituted peptide at 2–8 °C.
3. Scalp preparation
For hair growth: apply directly to scalp, massage gently. No need to rinse. Allow absorption for minimum 2–4 hours.
Subcutaneous (abdomen, thigh) or intramuscular (deltoid, vastus lateralis). Local injection to target tissue (e.g., muscle group) may enhance regional uptake.
4. Storage
Room temperature, protected from light. Copper complexes may degrade in UV exposure.
Frequency and timing vary by research design. Post-exercise or fasted state may theoretically enhance muscle uptake.
5. Duration
Minimum 8–12 weeks to assess efficacy in hair growth applications, per typical cosmetic peptide protocols.
27–31G insulin syringe for subcutaneous; 25–27G for intramuscular.
6. Monitoring
Glucose monitoring essential (hypoglycemia risk). No established IGF-1 or safety labs for human use.

06Stack Synergy

AHK-Cu
+ GHK-Cu
Moderate
View GHK-Cu

Both tripeptide-copper complexes share overlapping angiogenic and wound-healing mechanisms (VEGF elevation, TGF-β modulation, fibroblast proliferation). AHK-Cu's alanine substitution may offer distinct receptor affinity or pharmacokinetics. Co-formulation could provide complementary dermal signaling, though no direct synergy studies exist. Often used interchangeably or in alternating protocols.

AHK-Cu
0.001–0.01% topical · AM
GHK-Cu
0.001–0.01% topical · PM
Frequency
Daily alternation or combined formulation
Primary benefit
Comprehensive dermal regeneration, angiogenesis, hair follicle support
IGF-DES
+ BPC-157
Moderate
View BPC-157

Des(1-3)IGF-1 promotes myoblast differentiation and protein synthesis, while BPC-157 enhances tissue repair, angiogenesis, and collagen synthesis. Both act on distinct pathways (IGF1R vs gastric pentadecapeptide mechanisms) to support muscle recovery and connective tissue integrity. Synergy is mechanistic but lacks direct co-administration studies.

Des(1-3)IGF-1
Research dose post-workout (local IM)
BPC-157
250–500 mcg SQ, daily or twice daily
Frequency
Daily or per research protocol
Primary benefit
Accelerated muscle repair, enhanced hypertrophy, connective tissue support
+ TB-500
Moderate
View TB-500

TB-500 (Thymosin Beta-4 fragment) promotes cell migration, angiogenesis, and wound healing via actin regulation. Des(1-3)IGF-1 drives protein synthesis and myoblast proliferation. Combined, these peptides may synergistically enhance muscle recovery, repair, and hypertrophy through complementary anabolic and regenerative pathways. No direct human co-administration data.

Des(1-3)IGF-1
Research dose post-workout (local IM)
TB-500
2–5 mg SQ, 2× weekly
Frequency
Per research cycle
Primary benefit
Muscle hypertrophy, injury recovery, vascular support