The human tripeptide GHK-Cu in prevention of oxidative stress and degenerative conditions of aging: implications for cognitive health.
Pickart. Loren L; Vasquez-Soltero. Jessica Michelle JM; Margolina. Anna A
Key Findings
- GHK‑Cu binds copper tightly and can help restore normal copper balance in the body.
- It exhibits antioxidant and anti‑inflammatory actions that may reduce oxidative stress and neuroinflammation.
- The peptide can up‑ and down‑regulate many genes involved in neuronal development and maintenance, suggesting a role in protecting against age‑related cognitive decline.
Practical Outcomes
- GHK‑Cu looks promising as a low‑risk supplement for brain health, but there are no clear dosing protocols or human efficacy data yet. Biohackers could experiment with small oral or topical doses used in skin‑care, tracking any changes in mood, focus, or recovery, while recognizing that the evidence is still preliminary.
Summary
The short protein GHK‑Cu, which naturally grabs copper ions, has been shown to act like an antioxidant, calm inflammation, and tweak many genes that keep brain cells healthy. Because it’s already used safely in skin‑care products, the authors think it could help protect the brain from age‑related decline, but they haven’t tested it in people for cognition yet.
Abstract
Oxidative stress, disrupted copper homeostasis, and neuroinflammation due to overproduction of proinflammatory cytokines are considered leading causative factors in development of age-associated neurodegenerative conditions. Recently, a new mechanism of aging-detrimental epigenetic modifications-has emerged. Thus, compounds that possess antioxidant, anti-inflammatory activity as well as compounds capable of restoring copper balance and proper gene functioning may be able to prevent age-associated cognitive decline and ward off many common neurodegenerative conditions. The aim of this paper is to bring attention to a compound with a long history of safe use in wound healing and antiaging skin care. The human tripeptide GHK was discovered in 1973 as an activity in human albumin that caused old human liver tissue to synthesize proteins like younger tissue. It has high affinity for copper ions and easily forms a copper complex or GHK-Cu. In addition, GHK possesses a plethora of other regenerative and protective actions including antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and wound healing properties. Recent studies revealed its ability to up- and downregulate a large number of human genes including those that are critical for neuronal development and maintenance. We propose GHK tripeptide as a possible therapeutic agent against age-associated neurodegeneration and cognitive decline.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1155/2012/324832
82
68