📘 Peptide basics

Peptide glossary

Peptide research comes with a lot of jargon. This glossary defines the terms you'll meet most often across The Peptide Almanac, in plain English. For any specific compound, see its full guide in the A–Z directory.

Amino acid
The basic building block of peptides and proteins. There are 20 standard amino acids; their order in a chain determines what a peptide does.
Peptide bond
The chemical bond that links amino acids together into a chain.
Peptide vs. protein
Both are amino-acid chains. Peptides are short (roughly 2–50 amino acids); proteins are long, folded chains of many more.
Analog
A modified version of a natural peptide, engineered to change its strength, duration, or selectivity — for example, a longer-acting version of a natural hormone.
Receptor agonist
A molecule that activates a receptor, switching on its signal (e.g. a GLP-1 receptor agonist mimics the hormone GLP-1).
Receptor antagonist
A molecule that blocks a receptor, preventing its normal signal (e.g. a GnRH antagonist).
GLP-1
Glucagon-like peptide-1 — a gut hormone that curbs appetite and improves insulin response. The target of weight-loss/diabetes drugs like semaglutide.
GIP
Glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide — a second incretin hormone, combined with GLP-1 in dual agonists like tirzepatide.
Incretin
A gut hormone (such as GLP-1 or GIP) released after eating that boosts insulin and reduces appetite. 'Incretin mimetics' copy them.
Secretagogue
A substance that prompts the body to secrete something — e.g. a growth-hormone secretagogue triggers release of the body's own growth hormone.
GHRP
Growth-hormone-releasing peptide — acts on the ghrelin receptor to trigger a growth-hormone pulse (e.g. ipamorelin).
GHRH analog
A peptide modeled on growth-hormone-releasing hormone that stimulates the pituitary (e.g. sermorelin, CJC-1295).
IGF-1
Insulin-like growth factor 1 — a hormone downstream of growth hormone that drives tissue and muscle growth.
Myostatin
A protein that limits muscle growth; some experimental peptides aim to inhibit it to promote muscle.
Melanocortin system
A brain/skin signaling system involved in pigmentation and sexual desire — the target of peptides like PT-141 and melanotan.
GnRH
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone — the master switch of the reproductive hormone cascade. Agonists and antagonists are used in fertility and cancer care.
Nootropic
A substance studied for cognitive benefits (memory, focus). Several neuropeptides such as Semax are described this way.
Bioregulator
A term for ultra-short synthetic peptides (often of Russian origin) proposed to influence specific tissues; evidence is largely preclinical.
Subcutaneous
Injection into the fat layer just under the skin — the most common route for peptide injections.
Bioavailability
The fraction of a dose that reaches the bloodstream intact. Most peptides have very low oral bioavailability because they're digested.
Half-life
How long it takes for half of a substance to clear from the body — a key driver of how often a peptide must be dosed.
Research chemical
A compound sold 'for research use only' that is not approved for human use and often lacks human safety or efficacy data.
FDA
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration — the regulator that approves medicines and polices unapproved drug marketing.
WADA
The World Anti-Doping Agency, whose code prohibits many peptides in sport at all times.

Frequently asked questions

What does 'secretagogue' mean for peptides?

A secretagogue is something that makes the body secrete a substance. Growth-hormone secretagogues — like GHRPs and GHRH analogs — prompt the pituitary to release the body's own growth hormone rather than injecting it directly.

What is the difference between a receptor agonist and antagonist?

An agonist activates a receptor and switches its signal on; an antagonist blocks the receptor and prevents its signal. For example, a GLP-1 receptor agonist mimics GLP-1, while a GnRH antagonist blocks GnRH signaling.

What does 'research use only' mean?

It is a label on peptides sold as laboratory reagents rather than approved medicines. Such compounds are not approved for human use and are generally not quality-assured.

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