GH Peptides represent a specialized peptide family for growth hormone receptor studies and somatotropin analogues research in controlled laboratory settings. Each GH Peptide undergoes rigorous purity testing, batch documentation, and analytical verification to support reliable IGF-1 releasing peptides assay workflows under research-use-only protocols.
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Common Questions
What are GH peptides?
GH peptides — short for growth-hormone-related peptides — are a research category that includes two main subgroups. The first is growth-hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analogs, such as Sermorelin, Tesamorelin, and CJC-1295, which are studied for their interaction with the GHRH receptor. The second is growth hormone secretagogues, such as Ipamorelin, GHRP-2, GHRP-6, and Hexarelin, which are studied for their interaction with the ghrelin receptor (GHS-R1a).
Both subgroups are investigated in the research context of growth-hormone-axis biology. All GH peptide products from Well Elevation are lyophilized research compounds intended solely for in vitro laboratory investigation.
How do GH peptides differ from recombinant growth hormone?
Recombinant human growth hormone is the full 191-amino-acid human GH protein, produced via recombinant DNA technology. It is essentially identical to the endogenous hormone itself. GH peptides, by contrast, are much shorter sequences — typically on the order of a few to a few dozen amino acids — that do not act as GH themselves but rather engage upstream receptors (GHRH-R or GHS-R1a) involved in the GH signaling axis.
This makes the two categories mechanistically distinct. Recombinant GH is a replacement of the hormone itself, while GH peptides are research tools for studying the regulatory machinery that controls endogenous GH release.
What is the difference between GHRH analogs and GH secretagogues?
GHRH analogs are peptides modeled on the natural growth-hormone-releasing hormone sequence. They are studied for their ability to bind the GHRH receptor on the pituitary — the same receptor used by endogenous GHRH. Examples include Sermorelin (a GHRH 1-29 analog), Tesamorelin, and CJC-1295.
GH secretagogues are a structurally different class of peptides that act through the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHS-R1a), better known as the ghrelin receptor. Examples include Ipamorelin, GHRP-2, GHRP-6, and Hexarelin. The two classes engage different receptors and are therefore studied as distinct pharmacological families in research on GH signaling.
All products are supplied in powder (lyophilized) form and must be reconstituted with an appropriate diluent for research use only. Research supplies (e.g., syringes, bacteriostatic water) are not included. No dosing guidance is provided. We comply with all applicable local and state laws governing Research-Only Chemical sales. We are not a pharmacy and do not promote or provide guidance for human or animal use.