Peptides

TL;DR

  • Peptides are short chains of amino acids (2–50) that act as messengers, hormones, and regulators in the body.
  • Naturally present in food, tissues, and signalling pathways; synthetic peptides are widely used in medicine and anti-ageing therapies.
  • Applications span hormonal regulation (insulin, GLP-1), tissue repair (BPC-157, GHK-Cu), growth and muscle (GH secretagogues), and skin health (collagen peptides).
  • In longevity science, peptides are studied for DNA repair, senescence modulation, mitochondrial health, and anti-inflammatory properties.
  • They offer precision interventions but require careful dosing, medical supervision, and quality control.

At-a-Glance Facts

  • Entity Type: Biomolecule / Therapeutic Agent
  • Definition: Short chain of amino acids linked by peptide bonds
  • Size: 2–50 amino acids (longer chains = proteins)
  • Functions: Hormonal signalling, enzymatic activity, cellular communication, structural support
  • Hallmarks of Ageing Impacted: Loss of proteostasis, stem cell exhaustion, mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular senescence

What are Peptides?

Peptides are mini-proteins — small enough to penetrate tissues, bind to receptors, and trigger specific biological responses.

  • Endogenous Peptides: Naturally produced by the body (e.g., insulin, oxytocin, glucagon).
  • Nutritional Peptides: Derived from diet (e.g., collagen peptides, bioactive milk peptides).
  • Synthetic Peptides: Created for targeted therapy in medicine and anti-ageing.

They serve as signals and building blocks, orchestrating growth, repair, metabolism, and immunity.

Peptides and Ageing

Peptides are integral to longevity research because they:

  • Support Repair: DNA repair peptides, wound-healing peptides.
  • Combat Senescence: Peptides that reduce SASP factors or stimulate cell renewal.
  • Boost Mitochondria: Some peptides (like MOTS-c) regulate energy metabolism.
  • Promote Proteostasis: Help maintain protein quality control.
  • Affect Hormones: GH secretagogues restore declining growth hormone with age.

Hallmarks of Ageing Impacted

  • Proteostasis: Collagen and signalling peptides improve protein turnover.
  • Senescence: Modulate inflammation and SASP.
  • Mitochondria: Peptides like SS-31 support mitochondrial function.
  • Stem Cell Exhaustion: Peptides may enhance regenerative capacity.

Biological Functions & Mechanisms

  • Hormonal Control: Peptides like insulin and GLP-1 regulate blood sugar.
  • Cellular Repair: GHK-Cu aids in skin and tissue regeneration.
  • Immune Modulation: Thymic peptides regulate immunity.
  • Metabolic Regulation: MOTS-c and humanin affect energy and mitochondrial health.
  • Neuroprotection: Peptides support brain resilience and cognitive function.

Examples of Peptides in Longevity & Health

  • GHK-Cu (Copper Peptide): Skin repair, collagen synthesis, wound healing.
  • BPC-157: Tissue regeneration, gut and joint repair.
  • Epitalon: Telomere length regulation, antioxidant.
  • Thymosin Alpha-1 / Thymosin Beta-4: Immune function and tissue repair.
  • MOTS-c: Mitochondrial peptide improving metabolism.
  • SS-31 (Elamipretide): Protects mitochondria from oxidative damage.
  • Collagen Peptides: Support skin elasticity, joint, and bone health.
  • GLP-1 Analogues (Semaglutide): Diabetes and weight control, strong metabolic benefits.

Peptides in Medicine & Longevity Research

  • Approved Therapies: Insulin, GLP-1 drugs, calcitonin, gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogues.
  • Experimental: Epitalon, MOTS-c, SS-31, BPC-157 in regenerative medicine.
  • Anti-Ageing Clinics: Increasingly offer peptide protocols, though regulation varies by region.

Safety and Considerations

  • Purity Matters: Risks of contamination or poor-quality synthesis in unregulated sources.
  • Side Effects: Hormonal peptides may disrupt endocrine balance.
  • Long-Term Data: Limited for many experimental peptides.
  • Medical Supervision: Essential for peptides beyond dietary supplements.

Discovery and Research History

  • 1920s: Discovery of insulin, the first peptide hormone therapy.
  • 20th Century: Expansion into therapeutic peptides for hormones, immunity, and growth.
  • 2000s–Present: Explosion of research in bioactive, regenerative, and longevity peptides.
  • Today: Over 80 peptide drugs approved globally, hundreds in clinical trials.

FAQs

What’s the difference between peptides and proteins?
Proteins are longer (>50 amino acids); peptides are shorter and often signalling molecules.

Are peptide supplements effective?
Collagen and certain bioactive peptides have evidence; many experimental peptides are still under study.

Do peptides extend lifespan?
Some peptides (like Epitalon, SS-31, MOTS-c) show lifespan effects in animal models, but not proven in humans.

Are peptides legal?
Approved medical peptides are legal; many anti-ageing peptides are research-only or restricted.

Glossary

  • Peptide Bond: Chemical link between amino acids.
  • GH Secretagogue: Peptide stimulating growth hormone release.
  • Mitochondrial Peptides: Small proteins encoded by mitochondrial DNA (e.g., humanin).
  • Senolytic Peptides: Peptides designed to target senescent cells.

About the Author & Review

  • Author: [Editorial byline]
  • Medical Reviewer: [Reviewer, MD/PhD]
  • Last Updated: 25 August 2025

Schema (JSON-LD: BioChemEntity)

{

  "@context": "https://schema.org",

  "@type": "BioChemEntity",

  "name": "Peptides",

  "description": "Peptides are short chains of amino acids that act as signalling molecules, hormones, and therapeutic agents. They are widely studied in longevity, tissue repair, and metabolic health.",

  "knowsAbout": ["GHK-Cu", "BPC-157", "Epitalon", "MOTS-c", "SS-31", "GLP-1", "Collagen Peptides"],

  "sameAs": [

    "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peptide",

    "https://www.nature.com/articles/s41573-020-0079-6",

    "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7282279/"

  ]

}

Cross-Linking (Knowledge Graph Anchors)

From this page, link internally to:

  • GHK-Cu (copper peptide for skin)
  • Epitalon (telomere-related peptide)
  • MOTS-c / SS-31 (mitochondrial peptides)
  • Collagen (structural peptides for skin & joints)
  • Senescence & Senolytics (peptides reducing SASP or clearing senescent cells)
  • Rapamycin, mTOR, AMPK (nutrient sensing pathways peptides may influence)
  • Hallmarks of Ageing (peptides intersect multiple hallmarks)

Related Articles

Related Products

No Related Products Found

Search