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How to Reconstitute Research Peptides: Step-by-Step Guide

Complete guide to reconstituting lyophilized research peptides with bacteriostatic water. Covers calculations, technique, storage, and common mistakes.

What Is Lyophilization?

Research peptides are supplied as lyophilized (freeze-dried) powder to maximize stability during storage and shipping. Lyophilization removes water from the peptide solution under vacuum, leaving a stable powder that can be stored at room temperature for months to years without degradation.

Before use in research, lyophilized peptides must be reconstituted — dissolved back into solution using bacteriostatic water.

What You Need

  • Lyophilized peptide vial
  • Bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol in sterile water)
  • Insulin syringe or reconstitution syringe
  • Alcohol swabs
  • Calculator (for concentration math)
Why bacteriostatic water? The 0.9% benzyl alcohol acts as a preservative, inhibiting microbial growth. This allows multi-draw use from a single vial over 28 days when refrigerated. Sterile water (without preservative) must be used within 24 hours of reconstitution.

Concentration Calculations

Determine your target concentration before reconstituting. The formula:

Volume of BAC water (mL) = Peptide amount (mg) ÷ Target concentration (mg/mL)

Common Concentrations

For a 10mg vial:

Target ConcentrationBAC Water to AddDose Volume for 1mg
2 mg/mL5 mL0.5 mL (50 units on insulin syringe)
1 mg/mL10 mL1.0 mL (100 units)
500 mcg/mL20 mL2.0 mL

For a 15mg vial:

Target ConcentrationBAC Water to AddDose Volume for 1mg
3 mg/mL5 mL0.33 mL (33 units)
1.5 mg/mL10 mL0.67 mL (67 units)
1 mg/mL15 mL1.0 mL (100 units)

For a 50mg vial (Epithalon, GHK-Cu):

Target ConcentrationBAC Water to Add
10 mg/mL5 mL
5 mg/mL10 mL
2 mg/mL25 mL
1 mg/mL50 mL

Tip: Using 1mg/mL concentrations makes dose math straightforward — 1mg = 1mL = 100 units on a U-100 insulin syringe.

Step-by-Step Reconstitution

Step 1: Prepare

Wipe the rubber stopper of both the peptide vial and the BAC water vial with an alcohol swab. Allow to air dry for 10-15 seconds.

Step 2: Draw BAC Water

Using a clean syringe, draw your calculated volume of bacteriostatic water. For small volumes (under 2mL), an insulin syringe works well. For larger volumes (5mL+), use a larger reconstitution syringe.

Step 3: Inject Slowly

Insert the needle into the peptide vial at an angle. Direct the stream of BAC water down the inside wall of the vial — not directly onto the lyophilized powder. This prevents foaming and mechanical stress on the peptide.

Inject slowly. Do not force the water in quickly.

Step 4: Do Not Shake

Never shake a reconstituted peptide. Vigorous agitation creates air-water interfaces that can denature (unfold and deactivate) peptide molecules. Instead, gently swirl the vial or roll it between your palms until the powder dissolves.

Most peptides dissolve within 30-90 seconds of gentle swirling. Some larger peptides (GLP-1 analogs) may take 2-3 minutes.

Step 5: Inspect

The solution should be clear and colorless (or faintly yellowish for copper-containing peptides like GHK-Cu). Any cloudiness, particulate matter, or discoloration (beyond expected color) indicates a problem — do not use.

Step 6: Label and Store

Label the vial with: peptide name, concentration, reconstitution date.

Store reconstituted peptides at 2-8°C (refrigerator). Do not freeze reconstituted solution — freezing and thawing cycles degrade most peptides.

Peptide-Specific Notes

GLP-1 analogs (Semaglutide, Tirzepatide, Retatrutide): These larger lipidated peptides can be slower to dissolve. Allow 3-5 minutes of gentle swirling. They are sensitive to temperature — always store reconstituted solution refrigerated immediately.

Epithalon: Very small (432 Da tetrapeptide) — dissolves within 30 seconds. Stable post-reconstitution for 6-8 weeks refrigerated.

GHK-Cu: Slight blue-green color is normal (copper complex). Dissolves rapidly. Stable 4-6 weeks refrigerated.

BPC-157: Dissolves quickly, clear solution. Store refrigerated, use within 4-6 weeks.

TB-500: Larger peptide (~4963 Da), may take 2-3 minutes to dissolve with gentle swirling. Do not rush. Stable 4-6 weeks refrigerated.

Storage Duration

Storage ConditionDuration
Lyophilized, room temperature12-24 months
Lyophilized, refrigerated2-5 years
Reconstituted, refrigerated (2-8°C)4-8 weeks
Reconstituted, frozenNot recommended

Common Mistakes

Using sterile water instead of bacteriostatic water: Sterile water has no preservative — the solution will support microbial growth after 24 hours. Always use bacteriostatic water for multi-day use.

Shaking the vial: Creates foam, introduces air-water interfaces, and can denature sensitive peptides. Always swirl gently.

Directing water onto the powder: Can cause localized heating and mechanical stress. Always direct the stream down the vial wall.

Improper concentration math: Double-check your calculation before adding water — once reconstituted, you cannot easily change the concentration (you'd have to lyophilize again, which isn't feasible).

Not labeling: If you're reconstituting multiple peptides, unlabeled vials create dangerous confusion in research settings.

Bacteriostatic Water

Bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol) is the correct reconstitution solvent for research peptides. A 10mL vial is sufficient for reconstituting approximately 2-4 peptide vials depending on target concentrations.

Available from the same supplier as your research peptides — ensure it's pharmaceutical-grade with verified benzyl alcohol content.

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