Reference card

Lab Card · Glossary

Thirty of the most-used peptide-research terms in a single A4 mini-poster, three columns wide. Pin it on the lab wall.

Lab card · A4 · research-use only

Glossary mini-poster

Top-30 terms used in peptide research literature. For the full glossary visit /glossary.html.

Half-life
— time for plasma concentration to fall by 50%.
GHRH
— hypothalamic peptide that stimulates pituitary GH release.
GHRP
— growth-hormone-releasing peptide; ghrelin-receptor agonist class.
GLP-1
— incretin hormone; agonists studied for glycaemic / weight outcomes.
GIP
— incretin co-targeted with GLP-1 in dual agonists.
IGF-1
— primary mediator of GH effects on tissue.
mTOR
— central kinase regulating protein synthesis and autophagy.
AMPK
— energy sensor activated when cellular ATP is low.
Sirtuin
— family of NAD+-dependent deacetylases (SIRT1–7).
NAD+
— coenzyme central to redox biology and sirtuin activity.
Lyophilized
— freeze-dried; standard form for peptide storage.
Reconstitution
— adding bacteriostatic water to dissolve a lyo vial.
BAC water
— bacteriostatic water; 0.9% benzyl alcohol preservative.
HPLC
— high-performance liquid chromatography purity assay.
NMR
— spectroscopic identity test for peptide structure.
COA
— certificate of analysis; per-batch identity / purity report.
CAS
— Chemical Abstracts Service registry number.
Subcutaneous (SC)
— injection into the fatty layer beneath the skin.
Intramuscular (IM)
— injection into muscle tissue, deeper than SC.
Intranasal (IN)
— mucosal route; common for short peptides.
Pharmacokinetics
— how the body processes a substance (ADME).
Pharmacodynamics
— the biological effect a substance produces.
Bioavailability
— fraction of dose reaching systemic circulation unchanged.
Agonist
— binds a receptor and triggers its biological response.
Antagonist
— binds a receptor and blocks its normal response.
Receptor
— protein that binds a ligand to trigger a cellular response.
Ligand
— molecule that binds a receptor with specificity.
Endogenous
— originating from within the organism.
Exogenous
— originating from outside the organism (administered).
Research-use only
— sold for laboratory / in-vitro research; not for administration.