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For research use only. Not for human consumption. All products referenced are research chemicals.

GHK — Vendor Pricing & Purity Guide

Also known as: Copper peptide GHK
Anti-Aging & Longevity12 vendors
$0.47
Lowest $/mg
$3.40
Highest $/mg
12
Products

Research Overview

GHK (Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine) is the copper-free form of the GHK-Cu tripeptide. While GHK-Cu (with copper) is the biologically active form that modulates thousands of genes, GHK alone serves as the copper-binding peptide backbone. In research and commercial contexts, "GHK" and "GHK-Cu" are sometimes used interchangeably, but the copper ion is essential for biological activity.

GHK was first identified by Dr. Loren Pickart in 1973 when he observed that liver tissue from young people could stimulate old liver cells to synthesize proteins like young cells. The active factor was isolated as the tripeptide GHK, which naturally chelates copper(II) ions in the body. GHK-Cu concentrations in human plasma decrease with age, from ~200 ng/mL at age 20 to ~80 ng/mL by age 60.

When purchased as "GHK" without copper, researchers typically complex it with copper(II) sulfate or copper(II) chloride to create the bioactive GHK-Cu form. Some researchers study the copper-free form specifically to isolate non-copper-dependent activities, though these are minimal compared to the full GHK-Cu complex.

Key Research Findings

  • GHK-Cu modulates 4,000+ genes (~6% of the human genome) when copper is bound
  • Copper-free GHK has minimal biological activity — the copper(II) ion is essential for gene-modulating effects
  • GHK has the highest known affinity for copper(II) among naturally occurring peptides in human plasma
  • Plasma GHK levels decline ~60% between age 20 and 60, correlating with reduced tissue repair capacity
  • GHK can be complexed with copper in the laboratory to create bioactive GHK-Cu

Research Dosage Protocols

GHK is supplied as lyophilized powder. To create the bioactive GHK-Cu form, it must be complexed with a copper(II) source (typically copper sulfate or copper chloride) in a 1:1 molar ratio.

For researchers who need the active compound, purchasing pre-formed GHK-Cu is more convenient than complexing GHK with copper. See our GHK-Cu page for detailed research protocols.

For research reference only. Not medical advice. Not for human consumption.

Price Comparison (12 products from 6 vendors)

VendorPriceStock
Polaris Peptides
$40.00
$0.47/mg
85mg lyophilized
In Stock
Skye Peptides
$59.00
$0.59/mg
100mg lyophilized
In Stock
Core Peptides
$157.00
$0.79/mg
200mg vial
In Stock
Biotech Peptides
$165.00
$0.82/mg
200mg vial
In Stock
Peptide Sciences
$170.00
$0.85/mg
200mg topical
In Stock
Core Peptides
$176.00
$0.88/mg
200mg vial
In Stock
Core Peptides
$49.00
$0.98/mg
50mg vial
In Stock
Biotech Peptides
$199.00
$0.99/mg
200mg vial
In Stock
Biotech Peptides
$51.00
$1.02/mg
50mg vial
In Stock
Peptide Sciences
$210.00
$1.05/mg
200mg topical
In Stock
Peptide Sciences
$55.00
$1.10/mg
50mg lyophilized
In Stock
Soma Chems
$169.99
$3.40/mg
50mg vial
In Stock

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between GHK and GHK-Cu?

GHK is the tripeptide backbone. GHK-Cu is GHK complexed with a copper(II) ion. The copper is essential for biological activity — GHK alone has minimal effect. Most research uses GHK-Cu.

Should I buy GHK or GHK-Cu?

For research requiring the bioactive compound, buy GHK-Cu directly. GHK alone requires complexing with copper before use. Pre-formed GHK-Cu is more convenient.

Where can I buy GHK for research?

GHK is available from research peptide vendors. Compare pricing in the table above. Consider purchasing GHK-Cu directly for research applications requiring the active compound.

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