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GHK-Cu

Copper Tripeptide-1, Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine Copper, Prezatide Copper

Quick Stats
Studies 149
Trials 1
Score 4
2023 pubmed 17 citations

Thermodynamically stable ionic liquid microemulsions pioneer pathways for topical delivery and peptide application.

Liu. Tianqi T; Liu. Ying Y; Zhao. Xiaoyu X; Zhang. Liguo L; Wang. Wei W; Bai. De D; Liao. Ya Y; Wang. Zhenyuan Z; Wang. Mi M; Zhang. Jiaheng J

Key Findings

  • The ionic‑liquid microemulsion (IL‑M) increased topical delivery of GHK‑Cu by roughly three‑fold compared to standard formulations.
  • s biological activity and was safe in mouse skin applications.",

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY biohackers, this suggests that formulating GHK‑Cu in an ionic‑liquid microemulsion could dramatically improve its effectiveness for scalp use. While human trials are still needed, the study provides a clear protocol direction—using IL‑based microemulsions—to boost hair‑growth results without invasive procedures.

Summary

Scientists made a new skin-friendly liquid mix that carries the copper peptide GHK‑Cu much better—about three times more—so it can help hair grow when applied to the scalp. In mouse tests it worked safely, boosted growth‑factor signals and turned on a key hair‑growth pathway, showing promise for a non‑invasive hair‑loss treatment.

Abstract

Copper peptides (GHK-Cu) are a powerful hair growth promoter with minimal side effects when compared with minoxidil and finasteride; however, challenges in delivering GHK-Cu topically limits their non-invasive applications. Using theoretical calculations and pseudo-ternary phase diagrams, we designed and constructed a thermodynamically stable ionic liquid (IL)-based microemulsion (IL-M), which integrates the high drug solubility of ILs and high skin permeability of microemulsions, thus improving the local delivery of copper peptides by approximately three-fold while retaining their biological function. Experiments in mice validated the effectiveness of our proposed IL-M system. Furthermore, the exact effects of the IL-M system on the expression of growth factors, such as vascular endothelial growth factor, were revealed, and it was found that microemulsion increased the activation of the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway, which includes factors involved in hair growth regulation. Overall, the safe and non-invasive IL microemulsion system developed in this study has great potential for the clinical treatment of hair loss.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-11-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.bioactmat.2023.10.002

Citations

17

References

67