AHK-Cu is a synthetic copper-binding tripeptide extensively used in pre-clinical research to investigate dermal papilla cell activity, hair follicle biology, angiogenic signaling, and extracellular matrix dynamics in skin models. This research-grade peptide is produced under stringent GMP-compliant conditions and provided as a lyophilized powder to ensure superior purity, stability, and reliability in experimental applications.
For Research Use Only. Not for human use.
Engineered solely for preclinical investigations, each batch of AHK-Cu receives a comprehensive quality assessment and includes complete documentation, such as a Certificate of Analysis (COA), purity data, and structural verification.
Scientific Overview
AHK-Cu functions as a copper-complexed tripeptide studied for its role in cellular signaling within hair follicle and dermal systems in research settings. Preclinical investigations examine AHK-Cu in the following areas:
- Hair follicle biology and follicular cell cycle mechanisms
- Dermal papilla cell behavior and viability in vitro
- Vascular endothelial growth factor expression and microcirculatory signaling pathways
- Modulation of apoptotic pathways in follicular cell models
- Collagen synthesis dynamics and extracellular matrix remodeling in tissue models
Why Researchers Choose Our AHK-Cu
For laboratories requiring dependable AHK-Cu research peptide, our manufacturing process prioritizes reproducibility and scientific precision. Every batch is confirmed for:
- Purity and structural identity
- Consistent performance in research protocols
- Rigorous production controls and full documentation
- Accessible pricing within the research community
Research-Referenced Investigational Areas
- Dermal papilla cell behavior and apoptotic signaling in cell-based assay models
- Vascular endothelial growth factor expression under copper-peptide exposure in vitro
- Hair follicle morphology and cycle dynamics in ex vivo organ culture models
- Angiogenic signaling mechanisms in dermal tissue research
- Copper-mediated modulation of growth factor expression in laboratory models






