Quick Comparison

BronchogenDermorphin
Half-LifeApproximately 30 minutes (acute pharmacology); proposed gene-expression effects outlast plasma exposure1-2 hours (more stable than endogenous opioid peptides)
Typical DosageOral (capsule): 100-200 mg once daily for 10-30 day cycles, repeated 2-3 times per year. Subcutaneous injection: 1-5 mg per dose, alternate days for 10-20 day cycles. Standard Khavinson pulse-dosing protocol.No established human dosing. Research use only. Extremely potent — microgram quantities produce significant pharmacological effects. Not intended for human administration.
AdministrationOral capsule or subcutaneous injection (cycled)Research use only (injection)
Research Papers5 papers19 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Bronchogen

Bronchogen is a Khavinson tetrapeptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Leu) positioned as the respiratory-system bioregulator within the wider Khavinson peptide family. The proposed mechanism follows the family-wide framework: tissue-derived short peptides preferentially target the same tissue type from which they were originally identified, binding to gene promoter sequences and modulating expression of tissue-specific genes.

For bronchogen, proposed targets include genes regulating bronchial epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation, surfactant production by alveolar type II cells, ciliary function in airway epithelium, and local immune regulation in respiratory mucosa. Russian research has reported bronchogen-induced improvements in lung function markers in animal models of chronic respiratory injury and in elderly populations with age-related pulmonary decline. Cellular studies have suggested effects on mucociliary clearance and reductions in airway inflammation markers.

As with all Khavinson cytogens and cytamins, the evidence base is concentrated in Russian gerontology and pulmonology research traditions with limited independent Western validation. Bronchogen is not a substitute for evidence-based treatment of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or other diagnosed respiratory conditions, and its role in respiratory health should be considered exploratory rather than established. The brief plasma half-life (around 30 minutes) reflects the family-wide model of transient signalling triggering longer-lasting transcriptional effects.

Dermorphin

Dermorphin (H-Tyr-D-Ala-Phe-Gly-Tyr-Pro-Ser-NH2) is a naturally occurring opioid heptapeptide first isolated from the skin of South American phyllomedusid tree frogs (Phyllomedusa sauvagei) in 1981. It is remarkable for containing a D-amino acid (D-alanine at position 2), a feature extremely rare in naturally occurring animal peptides and previously thought to be exclusive to bacterial peptides. This D-amino acid substitution is the key to both its extraordinary potency and stability.

Dermorphin is a highly selective agonist of the μ-opioid receptor (MOR/OPRM1), binding with 30-40 times greater affinity than morphine. MOR is a Gi/o-coupled GPCR — upon activation, it inhibits adenylyl cyclase (reducing cAMP), opens G protein-coupled inwardly rectifying potassium channels (GIRK), and closes voltage-gated calcium channels. The net effect on neurons is hyperpolarization and reduced neurotransmitter release. In pain pathways, MOR activation in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord inhibits ascending nociceptive signals, while activation in the periaqueductal gray and rostral ventromedial medulla activates descending pain inhibition pathways. In the reward system, MOR activation in the ventral tegmental area disinhibits dopaminergic neurons projecting to the nucleus accumbens, producing euphoria.

The D-alanine at position 2 is critical because it prevents cleavage by aminopeptidases and dipeptidyl peptidases that would rapidly degrade an L-amino acid peptide. This resistance to enzymatic degradation gives dermorphin a significantly longer half-life than endogenous opioid peptides like enkephalins (which are degraded within seconds to minutes). Combined with its extreme MOR selectivity and potency, this stability makes dermorphin pharmacologically powerful but also highly dangerous — the same properties that make it effective for analgesia create significant potential for respiratory depression, physical dependence, and fatal overdose. Its notoriety stems primarily from illicit use in horse racing, where it was administered to racehorses as an undetectable analgesic/performance enhancer before specific assays were developed.

Risks & Safety

Bronchogen

Common

generally well tolerated in Russian observational studies.

Serious

very limited Western clinical data; not a substitute for evidence-based treatment of asthma, COPD, or other chronic respiratory disease.

Rare

allergic reactions.

Dermorphin

Serious

extreme potency makes dosing errors potentially fatal, severe respiratory depression, high addiction and physical dependence potential, sedation and impaired consciousness.

Rare

respiratory arrest and death from overdose.

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