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

Get it free
ToolsCompareThymagen vs GHK

Thymagen vs GHK

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

Immune Support
Thymagen
Skin & CosmeticAnti-Aging & Longevity
GHK
Summary
Thymagen is a dipeptide bioregulator (Glu-Asp) developed by Professor Vladimir Khavinson, tissue-specific for the thymus gland. It supports T-lymphocyte maturation, thymic function, and immune system normalization. As the thymus involutes with age (thymic atrophy), immune competence declines. Thymagen is used to support immune restoration, particularly in aging, post-illness recovery, and immunodeficiency states.
GHK is the natural tripeptide (Gly-His-Lys) released from human albumin that activates tissue remodeling, collagen synthesis, and anti-aging gene expression. The copper-free form is the biological signaling molecule; it chelates copper in tissue to form GHK-Cu but also has independent biological activity.
Half-Life
Short (minutes); sustained gene-regulatory effects
Extremely short as free peptide; tissue binding extends local effects
Admin Route
SubQ, Oral
SubQ, Topical, Oral
Research
Typical Dose
10 mg per day
100–500 mcg
Frequency
Daily for 10–30 days
Daily or 5x per week
Key Benefits
  • Supports thymic epithelial cell function and T-cell maturation
  • May partially restore thymic output reduced by age-related atrophy
  • Normalizes T-lymphocyte subpopulation balance
  • Supports immune recovery after illness, surgery, or chemotherapy
  • Anti-aging effects on thymic tissue
  • Complementary to Thymosin Alpha-1 and Thymalin in immune protocols
  • May improve vaccine responsiveness in older individuals
  • Stimulates collagen and extracellular matrix synthesis
  • Activates tissue repair gene expression programs
  • Anti-aging: reverses 57% of age-related gene changes
  • Antioxidant and anti-inflammatory
  • Wound healing and skin barrier repair
  • Improves skin laxity, texture, and radiance
  • Neuroprotective (stimulates NGF, BDNF)
  • Anti-fibrotic in liver and lung models
Side Effects
  • Generally well tolerated
  • Mild injection site reactions
  • No significant immunological adverse events reported
  • Excellent safety profile (naturally occurring peptide)
  • Rare: mild injection site reaction (SC)
  • No significant adverse effects identified in research
Stacks With