Tesamorelin Peptide – The High-Stability GHRH for Metabolic Research
Tesamorelin represents a highly stable, chemically altered version of the endogenous Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone (GHRH). By incorporating a trans-3-hexenoic acid group at the N-terminus and an amidated/acetylated C-terminus, Tesamorelin offers a significantly extended half-life compared to natural GHRH while maintaining the body’s physiological pulsatile rhythm.
Key Research Areas:
- Visceral Adipose Tissue (VAT): Tesamorelin is most notable in research for its ability to specifically target and reduce visceral fat. Unlike other secretagogues, it is a primary model for studying lipodystrophy and the metabolic complications associated with abdominal fat accumulation.
- Stable Pituitary Stimulation: As a full 44-amino acid analog, Tesamorelin mediates the effects of GHRH with greater stability than fragments like GRF (1-29). It binds to pituitary receptors to trigger the synthesis and release of growth hormone without causing the “bleed” effect associated with some long-acting analogs.
- Metabolic Health & IGF-1: Research focuses on how Tesamorelin-induced GH pulses lead to the mediation of IGF-1 levels, which in turn influences muscle preservation, cellular repair, and the improvement of insulin sensitivity in experimental models.
- Cognitive & Neuro-Endocrine Study: Because it preserves the natural rhythm of GH release, researchers use Tesamorelin to explore the relationship between the growth hormone axis and cognitive function, particularly in models of age-related decline.
- Comparative GHRH Dynamics: Tesamorelin is frequently used alongside other analogs like CJC-1295 and Sermorelin to compare receptor affinity, half-life efficiency, and the impact of N-terminal modifications on peptide longevity.
Elite Peptide Supply provides high-purity Tesamorelin for laboratory investigation. Our peptide is synthesized to ensure the trans-3-hexenoic acid modification is precise, providing researchers with the stability needed for long-term metabolic and endocrine studies.






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