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GHK-Cu (Copper Peptide) — Canada Research Brief

By Dr. Elena Morozova, PhDReviewed by Dr. Elena Morozova, PhDPublished April 11, 2026Last reviewed April 11, 20262 min read
Quick answer

GHK-Cu is a naturally occurring copper complex of the tripeptide glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine, first isolated from human plasma in 1973 and studied for roles in wound healing and copper transport.

Key facts

Canonical nameGHK-Cu
Alternate namesCopper tripeptide-1, Copper peptide GHK-Cu, Glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine copper(II), Prezatide copper acetate
Drug classCopper-binding tripeptide (skin / tissue remodeling)
CAS number49557-75-7
Molecular formulaC14H24N6O4 (copper complex)
Molecular weight463.98 g/mol
SequenceGly-His-Lys (Cu²⁺)
COA pending
Research product
US$60.00In stock
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Discovery and structure

GHK-Cu is the copper(II) complex of the tripeptide glycyl-L-histidyl-L- lysine. Loren Pickart first isolated GHK from human plasma albumin in 1973 while studying why plasma from young donors supported more robust liver-cell growth in culture than plasma from older donors. The "aging factor" turned out to be the amount of free GHK, which declines steadily with age.

The copper-bound form, GHK-Cu, is the physiologically relevant species. The histidine imidazole and the N-terminal glycine chelate a copper(II) ion, forming a square-planar complex that can shuttle copper into cells via plasma transport proteins.

Sequence: Gly-His-Lys (Cu²⁺). Molecular weight: 463.98 g/mol (copper complex). CAS: 49557-75-7.

Research pathways

Pickart and colleagues have published extensively on GHK-Cu's biological activities across four decades. The most-cited pathways:

  1. Copper delivery. GHK-Cu is a physiological copper transport peptide; many of its downstream effects are explained by the cellular copper it delivers rather than by the peptide itself.
  2. Collagen and glycosaminoglycan synthesis. In dermal fibroblast cultures GHK-Cu has been reported to upregulate collagen and glycosaminoglycan synthesis — the basis for its extensive literature in skin research.
  3. Anti-inflammatory signalling. In vitro work suggests GHK-Cu attenuates several pro-inflammatory cytokine pathways, though in vivo human confirmation is limited.
  4. Wound healing. Multiple rodent and ex vivo human skin models report accelerated wound closure in the presence of topical GHK-Cu.

Research-use framing in Canada

GHK-Cu is not a Health Canada approved drug, not a prescription, and — when sold as a research chemical — not a cosmetic. The specific form OVIOPEPTIDES sells is for non-clinical laboratory research use only. For the full Canadian regulatory posture, see our peptides in Canada guide.

Storage

GHK-Cu is sensitive to oxidation. Store the lyophilised product at -20°C protected from light. Once reconstituted, keep refrigerated at 2-8°C and minimise exposure to ambient light during handling. Copper-peptide solutions typically show visible degradation (colour change, precipitate) before chemical analysis confirms loss of activity — visual inspection is a useful first check.

Frequently asked questions

What is GHK-Cu?
GHK-Cu is the copper(II) complex of glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine, a naturally occurring tripeptide first isolated from human plasma albumin by Loren Pickart in 1973. It carries and delivers copper ions into cells and has been studied for roles in wound healing, collagen synthesis, and anti-inflammatory signalling.
How is GHK-Cu different from plain GHK?
GHK is the bare tripeptide (glycyl-histidyl-lysine). GHK-Cu is the biologically active copper complex — the histidine and glycine residues chelate a copper(II) ion, which is how GHK transports copper in plasma and into cells. Most of the biological activity attributed to GHK in the literature comes from the copper-bound form.
Is GHK-Cu approved as a skincare ingredient in Canada?
Copper peptides are permitted in cosmetic formulations sold in Canada when they comply with the Cosmetic Regulations under the Food and Drugs Act. GHK-Cu sold as a research chemical is not a cosmetic and is not a Health Canada approved drug, treatment, or prescription product.
What is GHK-Cu's molecular weight?
GHK-Cu has a molecular weight of 463.98 g/mol as the copper complex. Its CAS number is 49557-75-7, and the peptide sequence is Gly-His-Lys with a chelated Cu²⁺ ion.

References

  1. [1]Pickart L, Vasquez-Soltero JM, Margolina A. GHK Peptide as a Natural Modulator of Multiple Cellular Pathways in Skin Regeneration. BioMed Research International, 2015. DOI: 10.1155/2015/648108
  2. [2]Pickart L. The human tri-peptide GHK and tissue remodeling. Journal of Biomaterials Science, Polymer Edition, 2008. PMID: 18597728
  3. [3]National Center for Biotechnology Information. PubChem CID 156588903 — GHK-Cu, 2024

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