MatrixylvsMOTS-c
Side-by-side comparison across mechanism, dosage, evidence, side effects, administration, and stack synergies. Citations on every claim where available.
01Mechanism of Action
02Dosage Protocols
03Metabolic / Fat Loss Evidence
04Side Effects & Safety
- ·Known hypersensitivity to palmitoyl peptides
- ·Pregnancy / breastfeeding (insufficient data)
- ·Active dermatitis or open wounds at application site
- ·Active cancer or cancer predisposition
- ·AMPK pathway deficiency (efficacy nullified)
- ·Use with cancer-promoting medications (theoretical)
05Administration Protocol
06Stack Synergy
Matrixyl (Pal-KTTKS) stimulates fibroblast collagen synthesis via pro-collagen I mimicry, while GHK-Cu acts as a copper-binding tripeptide that enhances ECM remodeling through metalloproteinase modulation and wound healing pathways. Combined, they address collagen synthesis (Matrixyl) and matrix remodeling/repair (GHK-Cu) through distinct mechanisms, producing complementary effects on dermal architecture.
- Matrixyl
- 0.5–5% topical serum · AM/PM
- GHK-Cu
- 1–2% topical serum · same application
- Frequency
- Twice daily
- Primary benefit
- Enhanced collagen synthesis + ECM remodeling, improved skin density and elasticity
MOTS-c activates AMPK/PGC-1α for mitochondrial efficiency and fatty acid oxidation; ipamorelin stimulates GH for anabolic recovery and sleep depth. Pathways are complementary — MOTS-c handles metabolic flexibility and glucose handling while ipamorelin drives recovery and body recomposition through GH. Theoretical synergy is high; clinical data is lacking.
- MOTS-c
- 5 mg SQ · pre-workout (2–3×/wk)
- Ipamorelin
- 200–300 mcg SQ · pre-sleep (daily)
- Primary benefit
- Metabolic flexibility + GH recovery + ROS reduction