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Regenerative Research

GHK-Cu: The Copper Peptide in Cosmetic and Skin-Biology Research

·Educational reference

GHK-Cu is a tripeptide-copper complex (glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine: copper(II)) that occurs naturally in human plasma. Its concentration declines with age — a fact that has motivated decades of dermal and tissue-repair research interest.

In skin-biology research, GHK-Cu has been examined for its effects on collagen and elastin production, glycosaminoglycan synthesis and antioxidant defence. The copper ion is biologically active in its own right — required for the function of lysyl oxidase, the enzyme that cross-links collagen — and the GHK carrier facilitates copper transport into cells.

Gene-expression profiling studies have identified broad transcriptional effects of GHK-Cu across pathways related to extracellular-matrix remodelling, anti-inflammatory signalling and DNA-repair gene expression. These findings have positioned GHK-Cu as a research-grade reference for studying age-related dermal changes in vitro.

Cosmetic-research applications include reconstituted-skin model studies, fibroblast culture experiments and topical-formulation stability testing. Because the molecule is small and the copper complex is colour-coded (deep blue in solution), it provides convenient visual confirmation of dissolution.

Researchers should note that GHK-Cu is light- and pH-sensitive, and that reconstituted material should be stored protected from light. Reference-grade vials ship with batch documentation and should be characterised by HPLC and UV-visible spectroscopy where possible.

GHK-Cu remains a research chemical and cosmetic-formulation reference. This article is for educational purposes only and is not a recommendation for any specific topical or systemic use.

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