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GHK-Cu

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

Quick Stats
Studies 149
Trials 1
Score 3
1993 pubmed

In vivo stimulation of connective tissue accumulation by the tripeptide-copper complex glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine-Cu2+ in rat experimental wounds.

Maquart. F X FX; Bellon. G G; Chaqour. B B; Wegrowski. J J; Patt. L M LM; Trachy. R E RE; Monboisse. J C JC; Chastang. F F; Birembaut. P P; Gillery. P P

Key Findings

  • GHK‑Cu increased dry weight, DNA, total protein, collagen and glycosaminoglycans in wounds in a dose‑dependent manner
  • Collagen‑specific mRNA (type I and III) rose, but TGF‑beta mRNA did not change
  • A control tripeptide had no effect, confirming the specific action of GHK‑Cu

Practical Outcomes

  • The data suggest that GHK‑Cu can actively promote extracellular‑matrix buildup, which may translate to faster wound healing or skin‑repair benefits. For biohackers, this supports using topical or locally injected GHK‑Cu formulations at appropriate concentrations, though human dosing and safety still need clarification.

Summary

In rats, injecting the copper‑bound peptide GHK‑Cu into wound sites boosted the amount of collagen, other proteins, DNA and sugars that make up connective tissue, showing a clear dose‑dependent healing effect, while a similar harmless peptide did nothing.

Abstract

The tripeptide-copper complex glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine-Cu2+ (GHK-Cu) was first described as a growth factor for differentiated cells. Recent in vitro data showed that it possesses several properties of a potential activator of wound repair. We investigated the effects of GHK-Cu in vivo, using the wound chamber model described previously (Schilling, J.A., W. Joel, and M.T. Shurley, 1959. Surgery [St. Louis]. 46:702-710). Stainless steel wire mesh cylinders were implanted subcutaneously on the back of rats. The animals were divided into groups that received sequential injections into the wound chamber of either saline (control group) or various concentrations of GHK-Cu. At the end of the experiments, rats were killed, wound chambers were collected, and their content was analyzed for dry weight, total proteins, collagen, DNA, elastin, glycosaminoglycans, and specific mRNAs for collagens and TGF beta. In the GHK-Cu-injected wound chambers, a concentration-dependent increase of dry weight, DNA, total protein, collagen, and glycosaminoglycan contents was found. The stimulation of collagen synthesis was twice that of noncollagen proteins. Type I and type III collagen mRNAs were increased but not TGF beta mRNAs. An increase of the relative amount of dermatan sulfate was also found. A control tripeptide, L-glutamyl-L-histidyl-L-proline, had no significant effect. These results demonstrate that GHK-Cu is able to increase extracellular matrix accumulation in wounds in vivo.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1993

DOI

10.1172/jci116842