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Peptide Deep Dive · Evidence-Based Review

GHK-Cu

Copper Peptide · Glycyl-L-Histidyl-L-Lysine · Skin & Wound Healing

A naturally occurring tripeptide-copper complex found in human plasma, saliva, and urine. One of the most studied peptides in dermatology for skin repair, anti-aging, and wound healing.

3 amino acids
Copper chelate
Natural in human plasma
Collagen synthesis
Anti- aging
Educational content only. Not medical advice. This peptide may not be FDA-approved. Full disclaimer →
Category
Dermatology / Wound healing
Route
Topical / SC injection
Plasma Level
~200 ng/mL (age 20)
Human Data
Multiple clinical studies
Evidence
Strong clinical

What Is GHK-Cu?

GHK-Cu (glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine copper complex) is a naturally occurring tripeptide that binds copper(II) with high affinity. It was first identified in human plasma by Dr. Loren Pickart in 1973, where it was found to stimulate liver cells to synthesize proteins at a rate similar to young tissue.

GHK-Cu is one of the few therapeutic peptides with substantial human clinical data supporting its topical use. It naturally declines with age — plasma levels drop from ~200 ng/mL at age 20 to ~80 ng/mL by age 60 — and this decline correlates with reduced wound healing capacity and skin aging.

Core Concept
GHK-Cu works through two synergistic mechanisms: the GHK peptide activates gene expression changes (upregulating 31 collagen-related genes and multiple growth factors), while the Cu²⁺ ion serves as a cofactor for lysyl oxidase and other copper-dependent enzymes critical for collagen and elastin cross-linking. Together, they simultaneously signal for new tissue production AND provide the enzymatic tools to build it.

Amino Acid Sequence

GHK-Cu Primary Structure
G-H-K
MW: 403.9 (peptide) + 63.5 (Cu²⁺) = 467.4 Da · 3 residues · Tripeptide-copper(II) complex · Cu²⁺ bound to His imidazole + Gly amino
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At just 3 amino acids (Gly-His-Lys), GHK-Cu is the smallest therapeutically active peptide in this encyclopedia. Its copper-binding ability comes from the histidine imidazole ring (primary Cu²⁺ coordination) and the glycine amino group (secondary coordination). The lysine provides a positive charge that may aid cell membrane interaction.

Mechanism of Action

GHK-Cu's mechanism is unique among therapeutic peptides because it operates through both gene regulation (the peptide component) and enzymatic cofactor delivery (the copper component). Genome-wide studies show GHK-Cu modulates the expression of over 4,000 genes, with a net effect of resetting gene expression patterns toward a younger, more regenerative state.

GHK-Cu Wound Healing Pathway
Delivers
Cu²⁺ to tissue
Activates
Lysyl oxidase
Upregulates
Collagen I, III, elastin
Stimulates
Glycosaminoglycan synthesis
Result
Tissue remodeling + Repair

Additional Mechanisms

PathwayEffectSignificance
Collagen synthesisUpregulates collagen type I, III, and V gene expressionIncreases dermal thickness and mechanical strength
Lysyl oxidase activationCu²⁺ is an essential cofactor for LOXCross-links collagen and elastin fibers for structural integrity
Glycosaminoglycan synthesisStimulates decorin, heparan sulfate, and hyaluronic acid productionImproves skin hydration and extracellular matrix quality
Anti-inflammatorySuppresses IL-6, TNF-α; blocks thromboxane formationReduces inflammation without immunosuppression
AntioxidantInduces superoxide dismutase (SOD) and other antioxidant enzymesProtects newly forming tissue from oxidative damage

Evidence Base

GHK-Cu has one of the stronger clinical evidence bases among therapeutic peptides, particularly for topical skin applications.

Study AreaDesignKey FindingsEvidence
Facial skin remodelingDouble-blind RCT, n=67 womenTopical GHK-Cu cream improved skin density, thickness, and reduced wrinkles vs placebo after 12 weeksLevel I-II
Wound healingClinical studies, various woundsAccelerated wound closure in surgical and chronic wounds; improved cosmetic outcomeLevel II
Hair growthClinical pilot, alopeciaIncreased hair follicle size and growth rate; comparable to minoxidil in some measuresLevel II-III
Post-laser resurfacingClinical studyFaster healing and reduced erythema after fractional laser treatmentLevel II
Gene expressionIn vitro, genome-wide analysisModulated 4,000+ genes with net shift toward regenerative/anti-inflammatory profilePreclinical

Safety & Side Effects

Excellent topical safety: Decades of cosmetic use with no significant adverse effects reported. Generally recognized as safe for topical application.

Allergic reactions: Rare contact dermatitis reported in sensitive individuals. Patch testing recommended.

Copper toxicity (theoretical): Excessive systemic copper is toxic (Wilson's disease). Topical GHK-Cu delivers negligible systemic copper, but injectable use should be monitored.

Not for copper-sensitive conditions: Contraindicated in Wilson's disease or known copper hypersensitivity.

Regulatory Status

JurisdictionStatus
FDANot approved as a drug. Used as a cosmetic ingredient (INCI: Copper Tripeptide-1).
Cosmetic industryWidely used in premium skincare products (serums, creams, masks)
WADANot banned

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