The human tri-peptide GHK and tissue remodeling.
Pickart. Loren L
Key Findings
- GHK‑Cu attracts repair cells (macrophages, mast cells, capillary cells) to injury sites.
- It reduces inflammation and oxidative damage while increasing antioxidant enzymes like superoxide dismutase.
- The complex raises production of collagen, elastin, growth factors (VEGF, FGF‑2, NGF) and promotes fibroblast and keratinocyte growth.
- Topical GHK‑Cu improves skin elasticity, reduces wrinkles, and enhances hair‑transplant success.
- It also protects liver, stomach, intestine, and bone tissue in animal models.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, GHK‑Cu looks promising as a topical anti‑aging or wound‑healing agent, but the abstract doesn’t give dosing or formulation details. It supports using GHK‑Cu creams or serums for skin firmness and scar reduction, and suggests possible broader protective effects that need more research before systemic use.
Summary
GHK is a tiny protein that grabs copper and together they kick‑start many repair processes in the body. In studies it pulls in healing cells, calms inflammation, boosts production of collagen and other structural proteins, and helps skin, hair, bone, and even liver recover faster. People have seen tighter, smoother skin and better wound healing when GHK‑Cu is applied.
Abstract
Tissue remodeling follows the initial phase of wound healing and stops inflammatory and scar-forming processes, then restores the normal tissue morphology. The human peptide Gly-(L-His)-(L-Lys) or GHK, has a copper 2+ (Cu(2+)) affinity similar to the copper transport site on albumin and forms GHK-Cu, a complex with Cu(2+). These two molecules activate a plethora of remodeling related processes: (1) chemoattraction of repair cells such as macrophages, mast cells, capillary cells; (2) anti-inflammatory actions (suppression of free radicals, thromboxane formation, release of oxidizing iron, transforming growth factor beta-1, tumor necrosis factor alpha and protein glycation while increasing superoxide dismutase, vessel vasodilation, blocking ultraviolet damage to skin keratinocytes and improving fibroblast recovery after X-ray treatments); (3) increases protein synthesis of collagen, elastin, metalloproteinases, anti-proteases, vascular endothelial growth factor, fibroblast growth factor 2, nerve growth factor, neutrotropins 3 and 4, and erythropoietin; (4) increases the proliferation of fibroblasts and keratinocytes; nerve outgrowth, angiogenesis, and hair follicle size. GHK-Cu stimulates wound healing in numerous models and in humans. Controlled studies on aged skin demonstrated that it tightens skin, improves elasticity and firmness, reduces fine lines, wrinkles, photodamage and hyperpigmentation. GHK-Cu also improves hair transplant success, protects hepatic tissue from tetrachloromethane poisoning, blocks stomach ulcer development, and heals intestinal ulcers and bone tissue. These results are beginning to define the complex biochemical processes that regulate tissue remodeling.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1163/156856208784909435
199
79