Quick Comparison
| BPC-157 | MGF | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 4 hours (stable in gastric juice) | 5-7 minutes |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 200-800 mcg subcutaneous once daily, or 500-1000 mcg oral once daily. Often cycled 4-6 weeks on, 2 weeks off. Injectable may be administered near the injury site for localized healing. Oral route used primarily for gut-related conditions. | Standard: 200-400 mcg intramuscular injected directly into target muscles immediately post-workout. Due to the extremely short half-life, PEG-MGF is often preferred for practical use. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection, intramuscular injection, or oral | Intramuscular injection (site-specific, post-workout) |
| Research Papers | 30 papers | 30 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
BPC-157
BPC-157 is a synthetic pentadecapeptide (15 amino acids) derived from a protective protein found in human gastric juice. Its mechanism of action is remarkably multifaceted, affecting multiple organ systems and healing pathways simultaneously, which is unusual for a single peptide. The primary mechanism centers on the nitric oxide (NO) system — BPC-157 modulates both constitutive (eNOS) and inducible (iNOS) nitric oxide synthase, and can either promote or inhibit NO production depending on the tissue context and injury state.
BPC-157's regenerative effects are mediated through upregulation of multiple growth factors. It increases expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), promoting angiogenesis — the formation of new blood vessels at injury sites, which is critical for delivering oxygen and nutrients for tissue repair. It also upregulates epidermal growth factor (EGF), nerve growth factor (NGF), and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) receptors, supporting wound healing, nerve regeneration, and organ protection respectively. In tendon and ligament injuries, BPC-157 stimulates fibroblast migration and proliferation, accelerating collagen deposition and organized tissue repair rather than scar formation.
Beyond structural healing, BPC-157 has significant effects on the central and enteric nervous systems. It modulates dopaminergic, serotonergic, GABAergic, and opioid systems, which may explain reported effects on mood, gut function, and pain perception. It protects endothelial function, counteracts the effects of NSAIDs on the gastric mucosa, and has demonstrated cytoprotective effects in models of liver, brain, heart, and intestinal damage. The peptide also interacts with the FAK-paxillin pathway, which is central to cell adhesion and migration during wound healing. Its stability in gastric juice — unusual for a peptide — enables oral administration, making it one of the few peptides effective by both injectable and oral routes.
MGF
Mechano Growth Factor (MGF) is a splice variant of the IGF-1 gene (IGF-1Ec in humans, IGF-1Eb in rodents) that is produced locally in skeletal muscle in response to mechanical stress, stretch, or damage. Unlike the liver-derived systemic IGF-1Ea isoform, MGF is expressed transiently and locally at the site of muscle damage, making it the initial responder in the muscle repair cascade.
MGF's unique C-terminal E domain distinguishes it from other IGF-1 splice variants. This domain does not bind the IGF-1 receptor — instead, it has independent biological activity that activates quiescent satellite cells (muscle stem cells) residing between the sarcolemma and basal lamina of muscle fibers. MGF signaling drives these satellite cells from the G0 (quiescent) phase into the cell cycle, initiating proliferation. This proliferative burst expands the pool of myogenic precursor cells available for muscle repair.
The temporal sequence is critical to understanding MGF's role: mechanical damage triggers immediate MGF expression (peaking within hours), which activates and expands the satellite cell population. As MGF expression declines, the IGF-1Ea isoform takes over, driving the differentiation and fusion of activated satellite cells into existing myofibers for repair and hypertrophy. MGF essentially acts as the 'first responder' that determines how many satellite cells will be available for the subsequent repair process. Its extremely short half-life (5-7 minutes) is consistent with this role as a brief, localized signaling molecule rather than a sustained systemic factor. This rapid degradation is why the PEGylated version (PEG-MGF) was developed — to extend the biological window of satellite cell activation.
Risks & Safety
BPC-157
Common
nausea, dizziness, mild headache, injection site irritation.
Serious
no completed human studies, so long-term effects are unestablished.
Rare
allergic reactions, theoretical concern about promoting new blood vessel growth in existing tumors.
MGF
Common
injection site pain, swelling, and tenderness.
Serious
no long-term data on effects of artificially activating muscle stem cells, very limited human research data.
Rare
scar tissue build-up, allergic reactions.
Full Profiles
BPC-157 →
A healing compound made from a protein found in stomach fluid. It's the most studied peptide for tissue repair, with research showing it helps heal tendons, ligaments, muscles, the gut, and other organs. It's stable enough to survive stomach acid, so you can take it either by injection under the skin or by mouth.
MGF →
A natural 'first responder' peptide that your muscles produce when they're damaged by exercise. It activates dormant muscle stem cells and kickstarts the repair process. Think of it as the signal that tells your body to start rebuilding after a workout. The problem is it only lasts 5-7 minutes in the body, making it extremely impractical — which is why the longer-lasting PEG-MGF version exists.