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Testagen

KEDG, Testicular bioregulator peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 1
Trials 1
2025 pubmed

The Inhibitory Effect and Adsorption Properties of Testagen Peptide on Copper Surfaces in Saline Environments: An Experimental and Computational Study.

Dobriţescu. Aurelian A; Samide. Adriana A; Cioateră. Nicoleta N; Mic. Oana Camelia OC; Ionescu. Cătălina C; Dăbuleanu. Irina I; Tigae. Cristian C; Spînu. Cezar Ionuţ CI; Oprea. Bogdan B

Key Findings

  • The KEDG tetrapeptide reduced copper corrosion by about 86% in lab tests.
  • Its adsorption onto copper follows a Freundlich isotherm with a free energy of -30.86 kJ mol⁻Âč, indicating both chemical and physical binding.
  • Computational simulations (DFT and Monte Carlo) confirmed that electrostatic, van der Waals, and covalent interactions drive the peptide’s attachment.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers or self‑experimenters interested in health, there’s no actionable takeaway—this peptide is being evaluated as a metal corrosion inhibitor, not a therapeutic agent. It does not suggest any dosage, safety, or performance benefits for the human body.

Summary

This study looks at a tiny protein fragment called testagen (KEDG) and how well it sticks to copper in salty water to stop the metal from rusting. It’s a chemistry/engineering experiment, not a health or performance supplement, so it doesn’t give any direct advice for body optimization.

Abstract

Experimental and theoretical studies were applied to investigate the adsorption properties of testagen (KEDG) peptide on copper surfaces in sodium chloride solution and, implicitly, its inhibition efficiency (IE) on metal corrosion. The tetrapeptide synthesized from the amino acids lysine (Lys), glutamic acid (Glu), aspartic acid (Asp), and glycine (Gly), named as H-Lys-Glu-Asp-Gly-OH, achieved an inhibition efficiency of around 86% calculated from electrochemical measurements, making KEDG a promising new copper corrosion inhibitor. The experimental data were best fitted to the Freundlich adsorption isotherm. The standard free energy of adsorption (&#x394;Gadso) reached the value of -30.86 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>, which revealed a mixed action mechanism of tetrapeptide, namely, chemical and physical spontaneous adsorption. The copper surface characterization was performed using optical microscopy and SEM/EDS analysis. In the KEDG presence, post-corrosion, SEM images showed a network surface morphology including microdeposits with an acicular appearance, and EDS analysis highlighted an upper surface layer consisting of KEDG, sodium chloride, and copper corrosion compounds. The computational study based on DFT and Monte Carlo simulation confirmed the experimental results and concluded that the spontaneous adsorption equilibrium establishment was the consequence of the contribution of noncovalent (electrostatic, van der Waals) interactions and covalent bonds.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-07-26T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/molecules30153141

References

50