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Skin & Anti-Aging · 6 min · Apr 30, 2026

GHK-Cu Decoded: Why a Copper Tripeptide Modulates 4,000+ Genes

GHK-Cu is one of the most-cited peptides in dermal and regenerative research. Here's the mechanism in plain terms.

Golden tripeptide molecular helix glowing against deep navy background

GHK-Cu is a tripeptide of glycine, histidine and lysine bound to a copper(II) ion. It occurs naturally in human plasma but its concentration drops sharply with age. a fact that drives much of the research interest.

A landmark 2010 transcriptomic study (Pickart et al.) showed GHK-Cu modulates expression of more than 4,000 human genes. roughly a third of all known genes. with effects clustered around DNA repair, antioxidant defense, collagen synthesis, and inflammation resolution. Few small molecules have a footprint anywhere near that broad.

In dermal research, GHK-Cu has been associated with increased collagen I and III synthesis, glycosaminoglycan production, and modulation of TGF-β signaling. In wound-healing models it accelerates re-epithelialization. Hair-follicle work has shown effects on dermal papilla cells.

The copper-binding behavior is critical to the molecule's activity. which is why purity, lyophilization conditions, and reconstitution buffer all matter for reproducible results. Orvion supplies GHK-Cu at ≥99% HPLC purity, with a CoA showing copper coordination intact.

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