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GHK-Cu

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

Quick Stats
Studies 149
Trials 1
Score 2
1984 pubmed

Characterization of a chemoattractant for endothelium induced by angiogenesis effectors.

Raju. K S KS; Alessandri. G G; Gullino. P M PM

Key Findings

  • A chemoattractant for capillary endothelium appears only when an angiogenesis effector is present
  • The chemoattractant’s activity depends on both a chemotactic factor and an activating factor, boosting cell movement 5‑8‑fold
  • Heat and protease treatment eliminate the chemoattractant’s activity

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research suggests that simply adding a single angiogenic peptide may not be enough; effective angiogenesis may require a combination of factors that work together. However, the study does not provide dosage guidelines or a ready‑to‑use protocol for GHK‑Cu, so its immediate practical use is limited.

Summary

The study shows that when a substance that promotes new blood vessel growth is applied to a rabbit’s eye, it triggers the production of a protein mix that pulls blood‑vessel cells toward it. This mix needs two parts—a chemotactic factor and an activating factor—to work best, and it’s destroyed by heat or enzymes. The findings are basic science and don’t give direct instructions for using GHK‑Cu or other peptides in health protocols.

Abstract

The mechanism of neovascularization was further explored by the use of chemically defined angiogenesis effectors. The vascularization of the rabbit cornea was selected as an experimental approach that permits comparison of one cornea treated by the angiogenesis effector with the contralateral cornea of the same subject treated by the same molecule deprived of angiogenic capacity. Under these conditions, we observed that neovascularization was initiated by the appearance of a chemoattractant for the bovine capillary endothelium only in the cornea treated by the angiogenesis effector. The chemoattractant was purified about 150-fold by a single-step procedure, using gelatin:Sepharose affinity chromatography. Chemoattraction resulted from the combined effect of a chemotactic factor(s) and an activating factor(s). The association of the two enhanced 5- to 8-fold the motility of the capillary endothelium in a concentration-dependent manner with optimum at 0.2 mg/ml. The activating factor(s) does not have chemotactic capacity, but without it, chemotaxis is reduced to about one half. The chemotactic complex was present in the cornea regardless of the nature of the angiogenesis effector used as the triggering device. Heat and proteases eliminated chemotaxis and destroyed the chemotactic complex. Thus, neovascularization may be triggered by effectors able to induce in the cornea proteins, normally not present, that influence angiogenesis via mobilization of capillary endothelium.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1984