PepForge tracks and documents the peptide research landscape — mechanisms, findings, and open questions, written for people who want the actual science.
PepForge organizes its research library around function, not marketing categories.
Compounds studied in connective tissue, tendon, and systemic repair models — the mechanistic focus of the recovery-signaling literature.
Compounds researched for their roles in metabolic regulation, mitochondrial signaling, and energy substrate use.
Compounds under investigation for stress-response and neuromodulatory pathways, with an emerging but still early evidence base.
A running reference of the compounds we track most closely, with a plain-language summary of what the research says they do.
A synthetic fragment derived from a gastric protective protein, studied for its role in tendon, ligament, and gut-lining repair models.
A synthetic fragment of thymosin beta-4, researched for systemic effects on cell migration and tissue repair beyond the injury site.
A mitochondrial-derived peptide studied for AMPK activation and its links to metabolic homeostasis and exercise response.
A growth-hormone-releasing hormone analog researched for extending GH pulse amplitude, often studied alongside GH secretagogues.
A synthetic peptide analog studied in early research for anxiolytic-like effects and modulation of the immune and stress response.
A peptide derived from ACTH studied for neurotrophic effects, with early research interest in cognition and neuroprotection.
A growth-hormone secretagogue studied for selectively stimulating GH release with comparatively little effect on cortisol or prolactin.
A GHRH analog studied specifically for its effects on visceral fat, with a more established human trial history than most peptides here.
A copper-binding tripeptide studied for roles in collagen signaling, wound healing, and skin remodeling.
A synthetic tetrapeptide studied in aging research for its proposed effects on telomerase activity and pineal/circadian regulation.
A melanocortin receptor agonist studied for its role in arousal pathways, distinct from vascular-acting sexual health compounds.
A peptide fragment of prothymosin alpha, studied for immune modulation and its use alongside standard care in some infection research.
Works out concentration and draw volume from vial size, diluent added, and target dose. Pure arithmetic — always double-check against the vial label.
This tool performs unit conversion only. It doesn't recommend doses, and nothing here is medical guidance — for research reference only.
Occasional dispatches on new literature and compound documentation as it's published.