New — Free Peptide Starter Guide (2026): 13 chapters, 34 cited studies

Get it free
ToolsCompareCollagen Peptides vs Syn-Ake

Collagen Peptides vs Syn-Ake

Side-by-side comparison of key properties, dosing, and research.

Skin & CosmeticRecovery & Repair
Collagen Peptides
Skin & CosmeticAnti-Aging & Longevity
Syn-Ake
Summary
Collagen peptides are short-chain amino acid sequences produced by enzymatic hydrolysis of whole collagen (typically bovine or marine). They serve as bioactive signals that stimulate fibroblasts and chondrocytes to produce new collagen, elastin, and cartilage matrix, supporting skin, joint, bone, and gut health.
Syn-Ake is a synthetic tripeptide that mimics waglerin-1, a peptide found in the venom of the Temple viper (Tropidolaemus wagleri). It acts as a reversible antagonist of muscular nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, temporarily reducing facial muscle contraction and smoothing dynamic wrinkles. Often called a 'synthetic Botox' in cosmetic marketing.
Half-Life
N/A — food-derived; absorbed peptides circulate for hours, depot accumulation in tissues
Not applicable (topical; effect duration hours)
Admin Route
Oral
Topical
Research
Typical Dose
10–15 g
0.01–0.1% (4–8 mg/g in clinical studies)
Frequency
Once daily
Twice daily
Key Benefits
  • Stimulates skin collagen and elastin production
  • Reduces wrinkle depth and improves skin hydration
  • Supports joint cartilage regeneration
  • Reduces joint pain in osteoarthritis
  • Promotes bone density (stimulates osteoblasts)
  • Improves gut barrier integrity (leaky gut)
  • Supports hair and nail growth
  • Excellent amino acid profile for muscle recovery
  • Reduces depth of dynamic wrinkles and expression lines
  • Reversible muscle-relaxing effect on facial muscles
  • Smooths forehead lines, crow's feet, and frown lines
  • Non-invasive alternative to injectable neurotoxins
  • Rapid onset relative to collagen-stimulating peptides
  • Well-studied in in vitro and clinical cosmetic trials
Side Effects
  • Excellent safety profile as food-derived protein
  • Rare: bloating or GI discomfort at high doses
  • Rare: allergic reaction (bovine or fish allergy)
  • Mild bad taste (some forms)
  • Generally very well-tolerated topically
  • Rare skin sensitivity or contact dermatitis
  • Theoretical neuromuscular effects at systemic doses (not relevant topically)
Stacks With