FIND YOUR PROTOCOL
What are you researching?.
Pick the research area closest to your work. We'll show the compounds with the most relevant published literature, their typical research arms, and links to full protocols + citations.
GOAL — 01
Incretin pharmacology & energy balance
GIP and GLP-1 receptor agonists studied for body weight, glycemic control, and metabolic signaling. The most rigorously characterized compounds in the catalog — Phase 3 RCT evidence across multiple indications.
Read SURMOUNT-1 summary →
GOAL — 02
Tissue repair & angiogenesis
Compounds studied in preclinical models for tendon, ligament, wound, and gut mucosal repair. Mostly rodent literature; combinations engage complementary repair pathways.
Read BPC-157 evidence overview →
GOAL — 03
Growth hormone axis & secretagogues
GHRH analogs and growth-hormone secretagogues studied for endogenous GH release. Clinical and preclinical evidence with complementary mechanism.
GOAL — 04
Cellular aging & mitochondrial function
Cofactors and mitochondrial-derived peptides studied for NAD+ metabolism, sirtuin activation, mitochondrial signaling, and aging-related decline.
Read NAD+ aging research summary →
GOAL — 05
Immunomodulation & inflammation
Peptides studied for immune-system modulation, anti-inflammatory effects, and IBD/dermal-inflammation research models.
GOAL — 06
CNS research & nootropic effects
Peptides with documented CNS activity studied for cognition, neuroprotection, and stress-response modulation.
GOAL — 07
Skin, hair & dermal regeneration
Compounds studied for extracellular matrix remodeling, collagen synthesis, and dermal-repair pathways.
GOAL — 08
Methodology & reference
Not researching a compound directly — learning the analytical and laboratory methodology behind peptide research. Read these first if you're new.
For research use only. Each compound's article includes evidence-strength labels, conservative dose ranges, and citations to the underlying literature. Specific experimental design — dose, frequency, route, duration, model selection — is the responsibility of the qualified investigator under appropriate institutional oversight. Compound groupings above reflect commonly-studied research themes; they are not a recommendation for any specific protocol.