Common mistakes with GHK-Cu

Avoid the most common pitfalls when working with GHK-Cu in a research setting: storage, reconstitution, concentration, and COA verification mistakes.

Mistake 1: Improper storage after reconstitution

Once GHK-Cu is reconstituted with bacteriostatic water, it must be stored at 2-8°C (refrigerated) and used within 28 days. A common mistake is leaving the vial at room temperature for extended periods, which degrades the peptide and can invalidate experimental results.

Freeze-thaw cycles are another issue — each cycle reduces peptide integrity. If your protocol requires long-term storage, keep the lyophilised vial frozen at -20°C until the moment of reconstitution.

Mistake 2: Concentration miscalculation

Calculating the target concentration wrong is one of the most common experimental errors with GHK-Cu. Always double-check:

  • The stated vial mass (e.g. 5mg, 10mg)
  • The volume of bacteriostatic water added
  • The resulting concentration (mass / volume)
  • The volume of reconstituted solution you draw into the syringe for each dose point

A simple spreadsheet or lab notebook with these values at the top of every experiment can prevent costly errors.

Mistake 3: Skipping COA verification

Researchers sometimes trust a supplier's purity claim without checking the actual COA. For GHK-Cu, always:

  1. Match the batch number on your vial to the COA on the product page
  2. Verify the HPLC chromatogram shows a single clean peak
  3. Confirm the mass spectrometry reading matches the theoretical molecular weight
  4. Check the expiry date

Skipping this step means you are treating purity as a marketing claim rather than a verifiable fact. Peptify publishes every batch COA at peptifyuk.com, downloadable directly from each product page.

Buy GHK-Cu for research

99%+ HPLC-verified GHK-Cu in stock. Every vial ships from the UK with a batch-specific Certificate of Analysis. Same-day dispatch on orders before 1pm.

Frequently asked questions

What does GHK-Cu do in research?

GHK-Cu stimulates collagen types I, III, and V, alongside elastin and proteoglycans. It is studied in the skin-regeneration, epithelial-barrier, and tissue-remodelling research literature.

What is the difference between 50mg and 100mg?

Both contain the same 99%+ purity GHK-Cu. The 100mg vial provides a larger quantity for extended research protocols.

Is GHK-Cu the same as copper peptide?

Yes. GHK-Cu is the scientific name for the copper tripeptide (Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine Copper Complex) commonly referred to as copper peptide.