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Hexarelin

Examorelin, HEX

Quick Stats
Studies 233
Trials 61
Score 2
2009 pubmed 39 citations

Use of coated capillaries for the electrophoretic separation of stereoisomers of a growth hormone secretagogue.

Nehmé. Reine R; Perrin. Catherine C; Guerlavais. Vincent V; Fehrentz. Jean-Alain JA; Cottet. Hervé H; Martinez. Jean J; Fabre. Huguette H

Key Findings

  • Highly sulfated gamma‑cyclodextrin can separate hexarelin stereoisomers.
  • Coating the capillary with cationic poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride prevents peptide sticking, speeds up analysis, and gives stable results.
  • The method achieves high repeatability (migration‑time variation <1%).

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY researchers, this means there is a proven lab technique to verify the purity and exact form of hexarelin batches, which can help ensure you’re using the intended active version. However, the method requires specialized equipment and chemicals, so it’s mainly useful for labs or advanced hobbyists focused on quality control rather than everyday dosing protocols.

Summary

The study shows how to reliably separate and measure the different 3‑D forms (stereoisomers) of the peptide hexarelin using a special coated capillary in an electrophoresis test. By coating the capillary with a positively charged polymer, the test becomes fast (about 12 minutes) and repeatable, avoiding the problem of the peptide sticking to the tube.

Abstract

The diastereoisomeric separation of peptidomimetics of hexarelin, a strong growth hormone secretagogue, in CE has been studied. Highly sulfated-gamma-CD was found to be an appropriate selector for the separation of the stereoisomers. However, non-repeatable analyses were obtained on bare fused silica capillary due to the progressive adsorption of the analytes on the capillary wall. Two types of polyelectrolyte coating agents were tested to prevent this phenomenon. Coating with neutral polyethylene oxide was found to be efficient but resulted in a very long analysis time (about 40 min). Coating with cationic poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride was found both to prevent analyte adsorption, reduce analysis time and alter separation selectivity. EOF measurement revealed that the highly sulfated-gamma-CDs were strongly adsorbed on the poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride coating surface yielding a stable strong cathodic EOF, which considerably reduced analysis time (about 12 min). Very good repeatability of analysis was obtained (RSD(migration time)&lt;1%).

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-11-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/elps.200900093

Citations

39

References

65