Important regulatory notice. GHK-Cu is not licensed by the MHRA for human or veterinary use in the United Kingdom. It is supplied to the laboratory and academic market as a research-use-only reference compound. This page is a literature-context overview of reconstitution and laboratory-handling practice for research-grade GHK-Cu reference samples, plus the regulatory framework around personal-use claims. It is not a personal injection protocol and does not provide dosing, administration or therapeutic guidance. Peptides Lab UK does not endorse or recommend any human or veterinary use of GHK-Cu.
Quick research summary. GHK-Cu is a chelated copper-tripeptide (glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine plus copper) that has been studied since the 1970s, principally in cell-culture and small-animal contexts. The published literature includes work on collagen biochemistry, fibroblast gene-expression, and wound-repair models. Where GHK-Cu has been studied in living human subjects, it has predominantly been within cosmetic-formulation contexts at low concentrations applied topically. Personal injection protocols for GHK-Cu are not part of the MHRA-licensed medicines framework in the United Kingdom, and any clinical injectable use sits with a registered prescriber.
UK regulatory position on injectable GHK-Cu
GHK-Cu is not a licensed medicine in the United Kingdom. It does not appear in the British National Formulary, and the MHRA has not authorised any GHK-Cu product for systemic human use. In April 2026, The Guardian and the BBC reported that the MHRA had opened investigations into UK clinics making therapeutic claims about unregulated peptide products. Personal-use injection protocols for unlicensed peptides therefore sit clearly outside the UK regulatory framework. Anyone considering an injectable peptide protocol for any clinical reason should speak to a registered prescriber.
Laboratory reconstitution of research-grade reference samples
For laboratory researchers handling lyophilised GHK-Cu reference samples, standard peptide-handling practice applies. The notes below describe general laboratory technique for an in-vitro or analytical reference sample. They are not personal-use instructions.
- Bring the lyophilised vial to room temperature before opening to prevent moisture condensation.
- Reconstitution solvent (typically bacteriostatic water or a buffered solution appropriate to the assay) should be added slowly down the side of the vial, not directly onto the lyophilised cake, to minimise mechanical disruption of the peptide.
- The vial should be swirled gently rather than shaken.
- Reconstituted aqueous samples are stored refrigerated at 2 to 8 degrees Celsius for the working period, with longer-term storage of unreconstituted material at minus 20 degrees Celsius. Suppliers should publish their own stability data for any specific batch.
These are general laboratory handling notes drawn from published peptide-chemistry practice. They are not instructions for human or animal administration.
Why personal-use ‘inject this much daily’ guidance is not appropriate
Three reasons. First, GHK-Cu is not a licensed medicine in the UK and there is no regulator-approved dosing schedule. Second, the published clinical evidence base for systemic GHK-Cu in humans is very thin compared to the in-vitro and animal-model literature. Third, the MHRA has actively opened investigations into UK retailers and clinics presenting unlicensed peptides with personal-use protocols. Any responsible UK supplier will decline to provide a ‘how much should I inject’ answer for an unlicensed substance, and will direct that question to a registered prescriber.
Topical cosmetic GHK-Cu (separate context)
Topical cosmetic GHK-Cu sits in a different regulatory space from injectable use and is regulated as a cosmetic product, not a medicine, provided it makes only cosmetic claims. Concentrations in published cosmetic-formulation studies typically sit between 0.05 and 3 percent. For topical cosmetic products bought from a regulated cosmetic retailer, the manufacturer’s product label provides usage guidance specific to the formulation. Peptides Lab UK does not supply cosmetic products; we supply research-use-only laboratory reference compounds.
Safety considerations specific to copper
People with diagnosed copper-metabolism disorders such as Wilson’s disease should not handle copper-containing preparations of any kind without first speaking to a registered clinician. This is a general copper-chemistry point and applies to any product containing free or chelated copper.
For laboratory researchers
The relevant practical questions for a research-grade GHK-Cu reference sample are identity, purity and stability. Quality requirements are batch-specific certificate of analysis, third-party HPLC purity data, mass-spectrometry identity confirmation, and clear research-use-only labelling. Peptides Lab UK supplies on that basis.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a regulator-approved daily injection dose of GHK-Cu in the UK?
No. GHK-Cu is not licensed by the MHRA for systemic human use. There is no regulator-approved daily injection schedule. Any injectable peptide protocol should involve a registered prescriber.
What solvent is used to reconstitute GHK-Cu in a laboratory setting?
For laboratory research purposes, bacteriostatic water or a buffered solution appropriate to the specific assay is typically used. The reconstitution solvent should be added slowly down the side of the vial rather than directly onto the lyophilised cake to minimise mechanical disruption. These are general laboratory handling notes — not personal use instructions.
How should reconstituted GHK-Cu be stored in a laboratory?
Reconstituted aqueous samples are stored refrigerated at 2 to 8 degrees Celsius for the active working period. Unreconstituted lyophilised material is stored at minus 20 degrees Celsius for longer-term storage. Suppliers should publish batch-specific stability data. The peptide complex is sensitive to light, heat, oxygen and pH.
Why does Peptides Lab UK not publish a personal injection protocol?
Because GHK-Cu is not a licensed medicine in the United Kingdom. Publishing a personal injection protocol for an unlicensed substance places a seller inside the medicines regulatory framework — exactly the kind of marketing the MHRA opened investigations into in April 2026.
What does a quality research-grade reference sample look like?
Batch-specific certificate of analysis, third-party HPLC purity data, mass-spectrometry identity confirmation, and clear research-use-only labelling. A responsible supplier publishes these and does not market the compound for human use.
Where can I read the original GHK-Cu literature?
The peer-reviewed literature is indexed on PubMed. Key historical authors include Loren Pickart and colleagues for the original characterisation of the GHK sequence and the chelated copper complex.
If I have a clinical question about GHK-Cu, who should I ask?
A registered prescriber. Peptides Lab UK does not provide clinical, dosing or therapeutic guidance.
Research-grade GHK-Cu — HPLC verified, batch COA included
Peptides Lab UK supplies GHK-Cu as a research-use-only laboratory reference compound with batch-specific HPLC certificate of analysis and mass-spectrometry identity confirmation. For laboratory and in vitro research use only. Not for human consumption. Not a medicine. View GHK-Cu research compound →
Research use only. This page is a literature-context overview of laboratory reconstitution practice for research-grade reference samples, and a summary of the UK regulatory position on injectable GHK-Cu. It is not personal-use guidance, not dosing advice, and not therapeutic advice. GHK-Cu is not a licensed medicine in the United Kingdom. Peptides Lab UK supplies research-use-only laboratory reference compounds with batch-specific certificates of analysis. Products are not for human or veterinary use. If you have a clinical question, speak to a registered prescriber.
