Research Peptide Starter Guide
A Comprehensive Introduction for New Peptide Researchers
From fundamentals through vendor selection to your first protocol — a printable onboarding guide for new research peptide users. Research use only.
Research Highlights (May 2026 update)
- Start with a defined research question, not a peptide. Choose your compound after the question, not before — let mechanism and published literature drive selection.
- Verify before you order. Demand third-party HPLC + MS COAs. The 2025–2026 FDA enforcement wave + retatrutide quality crisis have made supplier vetting non-optional.
- First-order discipline. Order the smallest available size, verify the COA matches the vial batch, document everything, and start with a simple in vitro protocol before scaling.
For research-use only. Not for human consumption. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Last updated: May 20, 2026.
Table of Contents
- What Are Research Peptides?
- Legal Status & Regulatory Landscape
- How to Evaluate Research Peptide Quality
- The 9 Research Peptide Categories
- Reading & Interpreting Peptide Literature
- Choosing Your First Research Focus
- Building a Reliable Supplier Relationship
- Essential Documentation & Data Practices
1. What Are Research Peptides?
Definition
Research peptides are short-chain amino acid compounds synthesized specifically for laboratory investigation. Unlike commercial pharmaceuticals, research peptides are designed for experimental use in vitro (cell cultures), in vivo (animal models), or computational analysis—not for human use.
Key Characteristics
Composition: Chains of 2-100+ amino acids linked in precise sequences
Synthesis: Created through solid-phase synthesis (Fmoc or Boc chemistry) or recombinant production in bacteria/yeast
Purity Requirements: Premium research peptides require >95% purity (usually 98%+)
Stability: Varies by peptide; many require freezing at -20°C or -80°C
Cost Range: $50-500+ per milligram depending on complexity and purity
Why Research Peptides Matter
Peptides are fundamental to understanding human biology. They regulate metabolism, immunity, signaling, and disease processes. Studying isolated peptides allows researchers to:
- Test specific molecular mechanisms without whole-organism complexity
- Screen compounds for potential downstream development
- Understand dose-response relationships and timing
- Identify safety concerns before larger studies
- Develop better models of disease states
2. Legal Status & Regulatory Landscape
United States
Current Legal Status: Peptides sold with “Research Purposes Only” labeling are legal to purchase and use in laboratory settings, subject to institutional oversight.
Regulatory Bodies Involved:
– FDA: Oversees pharmaceutical claims and labeling
– DEA: Regulates controlled substance precursors (few peptides fall under this)
– State Boards of Pharmacy: May have restrictions in some states
– Your Institution: IRB (Institutional Review Board) oversees human research; IACUC oversees animal research
Key Requirement: Compounds must be labeled “For Research Purposes Only” and any use in humans requires FDA approval and IRB oversight.
Non-Human Use: Animal model research requires IACUC approval. In vitro (cell culture) research typically requires less regulatory oversight.
International Status
EU: Generally legal for research. REACH regulations may apply to manufacturing/import.
Canada: Legal for research use with proper institutional oversight.
Australia: Legal for research; imported compounds may require customs clearance.
China/India: May have restrictions on purchase by foreign researchers.
Always check your institution’s policies and local regulations before ordering.
Working with Your Institution
If you’re at an academic institution:
- Notify your department chair or research director of your peptide research
- Complete IRB/IACUC applications if your research involves human subjects or animals
- Document your use in lab protocols and safety procedures
- Keep COAs and supplier information on file for audits
- Review your institution’s ordering policies (some have approved vendors)
3. How to Evaluate Research Peptide Quality
The Quality Hierarchy
Pharmaceutical-Grade (not available for research): Meets FDA standards; hundreds of pages of documentation. Not sold for research.
Premium Research-Grade: Third-party tested, batch-specific COAs, HPLC + MS confirmation, >98% purity. Industry standard for serious research.
Standard Research-Grade: Supplier testing, HPLC purity data, acceptable for basic research. Lower cost but higher variability.
Budget Research-Grade: Minimal testing, purity data only. High risk of contamination or misidentification. Not recommended.
Essential Quality Metrics
1. Purity (HPLC %)
– Look for: ≥98% (minimum acceptable is 95%)
– What it means: 98% active peptide, 2% impurities/byproducts
– Why it matters: Higher purity = more reliable research results
– Red flag: Purity <95% or not specified
2. Identity Confirmation (Mass Spectrometry)
– Look for: Molecular weight matches literature values (±0.1 Da)
– What it means: Compound is actually what the label claims
– Why it matters: Prevents wasted research on wrong compound
– Red flag: MS data missing or weight doesn’t match
3. Batch-Specific Testing
– Look for: Each batch has unique COA with test date
– What it means: Not a generic template; actual data for your batch
– Why it matters: Quality varies between batches; you need specific data
– Red flag: Same COA for all batches or copy-pasted results
4. Third-Party Testing
– Look for: Independent lab performs testing (not supplier’s lab only)
– What it means: Objective verification by unbiased party
– Why it matters: Prevents supplier from hiding quality issues
– Red flag: Only supplier-internal testing provided
5. Endotoxin Testing
– Look for: <5-10 EU/mg (lower is better)
– What it means: Minimal bacterial toxins present
– Why it matters: Endotoxins trigger immune responses in cells/animals
– Red flag: No endotoxin data or levels >100 EU/mg
6. Sterility Documentation
– Look for: “Sterile” or “No growth detected” in sterility test
– What it means: No bacteria, fungi, or viruses detected
– Why it matters: Contamination ruins experiments and creates safety issues
– Red flag: No sterility testing or positive culture results
Building Your Quality Checklist
For every peptide purchase, verify:
- [ ] HPLC purity ≥98%
- [ ] Molecular weight confirmed by MS (within expected range)
- [ ] Batch number on COA matches your vial
- [ ] Batch-specific (not generic) COA
- [ ] Third-party lab clearly identified
- [ ] COA dated within 30 days
- [ ] Endotoxin <10 EU/mg
- [ ] Sterility test documented
- [ ] Appearance normal for that peptide
- [ ] Storage recommendations provided
4. The 9 Research Peptide Categories
Category 1: Metabolic & Weight Management Compounds
Purpose: Model metabolic regulation and energy homeostasis
Key Research Areas:
– Glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity
– Thermogenesis and energy expenditure
– Appetite signaling and satiety
– Lipid metabolism
Example Compounds:
– Tirzepatide: GLP-1/GIP dual agonist; research on combination agonism
– Retatrutide: Triple agonist (GLP-1/GIP/Glucagon); emerging research
– AOD-9604: GH fragment; fat mobilization studies
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Insulin/glucose dynamics in animal models
– Metabolic syndrome and obesity models
– Pharmacokinetics (how the body processes the peptide)
– Safety profiles in extended dosing
Category 2: Growth & Regeneration
Purpose: Study tissue growth, muscle development, and regenerative processes
Key Research Areas:
– Muscle protein synthesis and hypertrophy
– Bone density and repair
– Connective tissue regeneration
– Aging-related muscle loss
Example Compounds:
– IGF-1: Insulin-like growth factor 1; foundational mitogenic research
– BPC-157: Healing/gastroprotection; mechanistic studies
– GW501516 analogs: Endurance and metabolic research
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Growth factor signaling pathways
– Muscle fiber types and development
– Bone turnover and mineralization
– Regenerative medicine applications
Category 3: Immune & Inflammatory Modulation
Purpose: Understand immune cell behavior and inflammation
Key Research Areas:
– Cytokine signaling and immune cell activation
– Inflammation markers and resolution
– Immune tolerance mechanisms
– Aging of immune system (immunosenescence)
Example Compounds:
– Thymosin Alpha-1: Immune cell differentiation
– Lymphocyte research peptides: T-cell and B-cell function
– Anti-inflammatory peptides: Cytokine modulation
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Immune cell populations and activation
– Cytokine profiles and inflammation markers
– Cell signaling pathways
– Disease models (infection, autoimmunity)
Category 4: Neurological & Cognitive
Purpose: Study brain function, neuroprotection, and cognitive processes
Key Research Areas:
– Neuroplasticity and synapse formation
– Neuroprotection against injury
– Cognitive enhancement mechanisms
– Mood and behavior modulation
Example Compounds:
– Semax: Neuroprotection and cognitive studies
– GDNF-based peptides: Neurotrophic factor research
– Brain-derived peptides: Learning and memory
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Neurotrophic factors and signaling
– Synaptic plasticity measurements
– Behavioral testing in animal models
– Neural pathway mapping
Category 5: Cardiovascular & Endothelial
Purpose: Model heart function and blood vessel biology
Key Research Areas:
– Endothelial cell function and vascular tone
– Cardiac hypertrophy and remodeling
– Blood pressure regulation
– Platelet and coagulation function
Example Compounds:
– Vascular peptides: Endothelial growth and function
– Cardiac peptides: Heart muscle biology
– Nitric oxide-related peptides: Vasodilation research
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Endothelial function biomarkers
– Vascular remodeling pathways
– Cardiac gene expression
– Blood pressure/hemodynamics measurements
Category 6: Reproductive & Hormonal
Purpose: Understand reproductive biology and hormone signaling
Key Research Areas:
– Gonadal function and hormone production
– Fertility and germ cell biology
– Hormone-responsive tissues
– Menstrual/reproductive cycling
Example Compounds:
– GnRH and analogs: Reproductive axis research
– LH/FSH-related peptides: Gonadotropin function
– Sex hormone-binding peptides: Hormone regulation
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Reproductive hormone levels and dynamics
– Fertility and conception models
– Hormone receptor signaling
– Reproductive tissue development
Category 7: Cellular Signaling & Mechanism
Purpose: Dissect molecular pathways and protein interactions
Key Research Areas:
– Signal transduction cascades
– Protein-protein interactions
– Gene expression regulation
– Cell cycle and apoptosis
Example Compounds:
– Signaling peptides: Receptor activation studies
– Apoptosis-related peptides: Programmed cell death
– Cell cycle regulators: Division and differentiation
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Phosphorylation cascades and kinase activity
– Gene expression arrays and RNA-seq
– Protein interactions and co-immunoprecipitation
– Reporter gene assays
Category 8: Tissue-Specific Compounds
Purpose: Study organ-specific function and dysfunction
Key Research Areas:
– Liver health and hepatocyte function
– Kidney function and filtration
– Gastrointestinal tract biology
– Pancreatic islet function
Example Compounds:
– Hepatoprotective peptides: Liver function and toxicity
– Renal peptides: Kidney filtration and disease
– GI peptides: Gut barrier and motility
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Organ-specific biomarkers
– Histopathology and tissue changes
– Functional assays (enzyme activity, clearance)
– Disease models specific to tissue
Category 9: Anti-Aging & Longevity
Purpose: Model aging processes and test longevity interventions
Key Research Areas:
– Cellular senescence and aging
– Telomere biology
– Mitochondrial function and aging
– Circadian biology and aging
Example Compounds:
– NAD+-related peptides: Cellular energy and longevity
– Senolytic peptides: Senescent cell clearance
– Mitochondrial peptides: Energy metabolism
Literature Focus: Look for studies on:
– Aging biomarkers and lifespan extension
– Cellular senescence markers
– Mitochondrial function tests
– Circadian gene expression
5. Reading & Interpreting Peptide Literature
Understanding Study Types
In Vitro Studies (cell culture)
– What they show: How peptide affects cells in dishes
– Strengths: Controlled conditions, mechanistic clarity
– Limitations: No organism complexity, no absorption/metabolism
– How to interpret: Look for dose-response curves and statistical significance
In Vivo Animal Studies (mice, rats, primates)
– What they show: Effects in living organisms, absorption, metabolism
– Strengths: Whole-organism function, realistic dosing
– Limitations: Different metabolism than humans, animal welfare concerns
– How to interpret: Compare to your organism type; note species differences
Human Clinical Trials (phases 1, 2, 3, 4)
– Phase 1: Safety and dose escalation (20-100 subjects)
– Phase 2: Efficacy signals (100-500 subjects)
– Phase 3: Confirmation of benefit (1,000-5,000 subjects)
– Phase 4: Monitoring after approval
– How to interpret: Higher phases have more weight; note inclusion/exclusion criteria
Critical Elements to Evaluate
1. Study Design
– Randomized? (Better)
– Blinded? (Better; prevents bias)
– Controlled? (Versus placebo or standard treatment?)
– Sample size? (Larger is more reliable)
2. Dosing Information
– Dose used (look for dose-response; higher ≠ always better)
– Route (IV, SC, oral—affects absorption)
– Timing (once daily vs. multiple times; timing matters)
– Duration (short-term vs. long-term effects)
3. Outcome Measurements
– Primary outcome (main question being answered)
– Secondary outcomes (additional measurements)
– Biomarkers used (biochemical measures of effect)
– Statistical significance (p-values; <0.05 is standard)
4. Adverse Events
– Reported side effects
– Dropout rates (high dropout suggests tolerability issues)
– Serious adverse events
– Long-term safety follow-up
5. Author & Journal Credibility
– Published in peer-reviewed journal? (Required)
– Journal impact factor (higher = better review process)
– Author affiliations (academic medical centers vs. commercial sponsors)
– Conflict of interest disclosure
Common Literature Red Flags
| Red Flag | Meaning | What to Do |
|---|---|---|
| Only in-house unpublished data | No independent verification | Demand published evidence |
| Single small study cited | Results may be anomalies | Look for replication |
| “Proprietary research” | Can’t be independently verified | Don’t rely on this |
| Study in different organism | May not translate to your model | Test in your system |
| Very high effect sizes | May indicate methodological issues | Be skeptical |
| No statistical analysis | Can’t assess significance | Don’t cite |
| Study by peptide company only | Conflict of interest | Look for independent research |
Building Your Research Database
Create a spreadsheet for tracking papers:
| Compound | Title | Journal | Year | Study Type | Key Finding | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tirzepatide | “[Title]” | Nature Medicine | 2023 | Phase 3 RCT | 22% weight loss | URL |
Your database becomes invaluable for:
– Understanding literature consensus
– Identifying gaps in research
– Tracking dosing across studies
– Noting safety signals
– Justifying your experimental design to reviewers
6. Choosing Your First Research Focus
Self-Assessment Questions
Before launching your first peptide research project, ask:
1. What is your research question?
– Mechanistic (how does this work?)
– Efficacy (does this work?)
– Safety (is this safe?)
– Comparative (which is better?)
2. What system will you use?
– Cell culture (isolated cells)?
– Organ culture (tissue slices)?
– Animal models (whole organism)?
– Computational modeling?
3. What resources do you have?
– Budget for purchasing peptides
– Lab equipment (incubators, centrifuges, etc.)
– Skilled personnel
– Time commitment
4. What outcome will you measure?
– Biochemical (enzyme activity, hormone levels)?
– Cellular (gene expression, cell viability)?
– Physiological (heart rate, blood pressure)?
– Behavioral (maze performance, activity)?
Project Framework
A strong first project:
- Targets one compound (not comparing five at once)
- Answers one clear question (mechanism OR efficacy, not both initially)
- Uses established methods (not developing new techniques)
- Includes positive and negative controls (proves your system works)
- Fits your timeline (6-12 months for master’s students; longer for PhDs)
- Has clear success criteria (what counts as positive results?)
Common First-Time Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Ordering before literature review
Fix: Read 20+ papers first. Understand what’s known.
Mistake 2: Trying to study 5 compounds at once
Fix: Master one compound with one mechanism. Scale later.
Mistake 3: Skipping proper controls
Fix: Always include vehicle control and positive control.
Mistake 4: Using lowest-purity available peptide
Fix: Buy premium quality first. Purity issues invalidate results.
Mistake 5: Not validating your assay
Fix: Prove your measurement method works before testing peptide.
7. Building a Reliable Supplier Relationship
Supplier Selection Criteria
When choosing a vendor for ongoing use:
Minimum Requirements:
– [ ] Batch-specific COAs with HPLC + MS data
– [ ] Third-party testing lab clearly identified
– [ ] Purity consistently ≥98%
– [ ] 24-hour email response time
– [ ] 3+ year track record
Ideal Features:
– [ ] Educational content on compounds
– [ ] Published research partnerships
– [ ] Institutional customer references
– [ ] Customization capability (concentrations, formulations)
– [ ] Bulk pricing for ongoing use
First Order Protocol
When ordering from a new supplier:
1. Start small
– Order 10-20 mg (enough for initial experiments)
– Don’t commit to bulk until quality verified
2. Request full documentation
– [ ] Complete COA (not summary)
– [ ] Lab contact information
– [ ] Storage and handling instructions
– [ ] Safety data sheet (SDS)
3. Upon receipt, verify immediately
– [ ] Batch number matches label and COA
– [ ] Appearance matches COA description
– [ ] All documentation included
– [ ] Packaging intact, no damage
4. Test your batch
– [ ] Run HPLC or other QC test if possible
– [ ] Use in small pilot experiment
– [ ] Compare to literature values
– [ ] Document results
5. Communicate with supplier
– [ ] Provide feedback on quality
– [ ] Ask about larger quantity pricing
– [ ] Request ongoing relationship pricing
– [ ] Share your research timeline
Building Long-Term Relationships
Suppliers reward reliable customers with:
– Better pricing on volume orders
– Preference in supply allocation (during shortages)
– Priority technical support
– Custom concentrations/formulations
– Early access to new compounds
To maintain good supplier relationships:
- [ ] Pay invoices on time
- [ ] Provide advance notice for large orders
- [ ] Communicate regularly
- [ ] Give feedback on product quality
- [ ] Share non-confidential research results
- [ ] Provide references for their use (with your permission)
8. Essential Documentation & Data Practices
What to Keep on File
For every peptide project, maintain:
Regulatory Documentation
– [ ] IRB approval letter (if human research)
– [ ] IACUC approval letter (if animal research)
– [ ] Institutional safety approval
– [ ] Lab use authorization
Supplier Documentation
– [ ] Supplier name and contact
– [ ] Purchase order / invoice
– [ ] Batch number and date received
– [ ] Complete COA (batch-specific)
– [ ] Safety data sheet (SDS)
– [ ] Supplier’s quality certification
Experiment Documentation
– [ ] Protocol (written before starting)
– [ ] Lab notebook entries (date, observer, details)
– [ ] Photos of results
– [ ] Raw data files
– [ ] Analysis notebook
– [ ] Statistical outputs
Publication Documentation
– [ ] Supplier and batch info in methods section
– [ ] COA data referenced (supplementary material)
– [ ] ARRIVE guidelines compliance (animal research)
Data Management Best Practices
Naming Convention Example:
2026-04-15_Tirzepatide_Batch-2026-04A_Viability_v1.xlsx
[date]_[compound]_[batch]_[experiment]_[version]
Folder Structure:
ProjectName/
├── Protocols/
├── Supplier_Docs/
├── Raw_Data/
├── Analysis/
├── Lab_Notebooks/
└── Publications/
Backup Practice:
– Save to institutional server (automatic backup)
– Cloud backup (if allowed)
– External drive (annual archive)
When Publishing Your Research
Include in Methods:
– Supplier name and location
– Batch number
– Peptide specifications (purity, MW, etc.)
– Storage conditions
– Lot number if available
Include in Supplementary Material:
– Copy of COA (or key metrics)
– Supplier contact information
– Protocol modifications (if any)
Ethical Consideration:
– Disclose if supplier provided funding
– Note any commercial relationships
– Acknowledge quality/availability limitations
Quick Reference Checklist: Before Your First Order
Before placing your first research peptide order, verify:
Planning Phase
– [ ] Research question is clear and testable
– [ ] Literature review completed (20+ papers)
– [ ] Regulatory approvals obtained (IRB/IACUC if needed)
– [ ] Budget allocated (peptides + shipping + analysis)
– [ ] Equipment/methods ready
Supplier Selection
– [ ] Supplier meets minimum quality requirements
– [ ] Multiple suppliers evaluated
– [ ] References checked
– [ ] Pricing compared
– [ ] Security and privacy verified
Order Preparation
– [ ] Compound specifications confirmed (MW, sequence, purity)
– [ ] Quantity calculated (include controls + buffer)
– [ ] Storage protocol confirmed
– [ ] Shipping/handling requirements understood
– [ ] Documentation requirements clarified
Upon Receipt
– [ ] Batch number verified
– [ ] COA reviewed and filed
– [ ] Appearance matches specifications
– [ ] Storage conditions implemented immediately
– [ ] Supplier contacted if any issues
About Artemis Labs
Artemis Labs was built to serve serious researchers. Every compound we supply is:
- Third-party tested with batch-specific COAs
- HPLC + MS verified for identity and purity (≥98%)
- Endotoxin and sterility tested
- Properly labeled for research use only
- Backed by responsive technical support
We believe your research deserves premium quality materials and reliable partnerships. We’re here to help you succeed.
Download our detailed Supplier Evaluation Checklist to assess any vendor—including us.
Additional Resources:
– Our COA Interpretation Quick Reference
– Supplier Evaluation Checklist
– Weight Loss Peptide Comparison Chart (for metabolic research)
– Retatrutide Verification Checklist — if pursuing triple-agonist research
Related Pages
- Complete Guide to Research Peptides 2026 — root pillar
- Peptide Quality Assurance & Supplier Evaluation
- HPLC Testing Explained
- Reading a Certificate of Analysis
- Supplier Evaluation Checklist
- Tirzepatide product page
- BPC-157 + TB-500 product page
- CJC-1295 product page
Last Updated: May 20, 2026
Questions? Email research@artemispeptides.com
This guide is for research use only. Not for human consumption. All compounds should be handled according to institutional safety protocols. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.