FOR RESEARCH USE ONLY. NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION.

GHK-Cu — Published Research

Reviewed by: Dr. James Porter, PhD| Last updated: abril 9, 2026|For laboratory reference only

← Back to GHK-Cu product page

Biblioteca de investigación

Published research on GHK-Cu — for educational purposes only

GHK-Cu Copper Coordination Chemistry

GHK binds copper(II) with a stability constant (log K) of approximately 16.2, among the highest for biological copper-binding molecules. The coordination geometry involves the amino terminus, the histidine imidazole nitrogen, and deprotonated amide nitrogens. NMR and X-ray crystallography studies show a square-planar coordination. The high copper affinity suggests GHK may function in copper transport and delivery to tissues. Plasma GHK levels are approximately 200 ng/mL in young adults, decreasing with age.

Pickart L, Margolina A. “Regenerative and protective actions of the GHK-Cu peptide in the light of the new gene data.” Int J Mol Sci. 2018. PMC

GHK-Cu and Gene Expression Modulation

Microarray analyses using the Broad Institute Connectivity Map database identified that GHK modulates the expression of numerous genes involved in extracellular matrix remodeling, including upregulation of collagen types I and III, elastin, and decorin genes, and downregulation of metalloproteinases. The mechanism appears to involve activation of the integrin receptor complex and downstream focal adhesion kinase signaling, as well as effects on TGF-β pathway genes in dermal fibroblast cultures.

Pickart L et al. “GHK peptide as a natural modulator of multiple cellular pathways in skin regeneration.” Biomed Res Int. 2015. PubMed

GHK-Cu in Wound Healing Models

In vivo wound healing studies in rat and pig models demonstrated that GHK-Cu increased the rate of wound closure, collagen deposition, and angiogenesis as measured by vessel density and VEGF expression. The copper moiety appears essential for full activity, as apo-GHK (without copper) showed reduced effects. Mechanistic studies suggest GHK-Cu activates copper-dependent enzymes including lysyl oxidase (collagen crosslinking) and superoxide dismutase (SOD).

Maquart FX et al. “Stimulation of collagen synthesis in fibroblast cultures by the tripeptide-copper complex glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine-Cu2+.” FEBS Lett. 1988. PubMed

To compare published studies with Panda batch documentation, review Reportes de laboratorio (COAs), Calidad y pruebas, la guía para evaluar materiales de investigación, o nuestras Preguntas frecuentes.

Disclaimer: All research citations are provided as references to published laboratory literature only. These materials may summarize in vitro and animal-model findings. Products are sold strictly for laboratory research use. No statements on this page are intended as dosing, administration, treatment, or other human-use guidance.

Reviewed by

Dr. James Porter, PhD

Biochemist with a focus on peptide synthesis and structure-activity relationships. Reviews research summaries for scientific accuracy.

Editorial Review

Reviewed by Dr. Sarah Chen, PharmD y Dr. James Porter, PhD — Panda Peptides Research Team.

Last reviewed: April 2026.

This content summarizes published laboratory literature for research-reference purposes only. Products referenced by Panda Peptides are sold strictly for laboratory research use. This page is not intended as dosing, administration, treatment, or other human-use guidance.