Quick Comparison

CJC-1295 with DACCortagen
Half-Life144-192 hours (6-8 days)1-3 hours
Typical DosageStandard: 1-2 mg subcutaneous once weekly. Lower dosing frequency than the no-DAC version due to extended half-life. Some protocols use every 5 days.Oral/sublingual: 10-20 mg once daily. Injectable: 1-10 mg subcutaneous once daily. Typical course: 10-20 days, repeated two or three times yearly. Available in capsule form in some markets.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection (weekly)Oral, sublingual, or subcutaneous injection
Research Papers0 papers1 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

CJC-1295 with DAC

CJC-1295 with DAC shares the same core peptide sequence and GHRH receptor binding mechanism as the no-DAC version — it activates Gs/adenylyl cyclase/cAMP/PKA signaling in pituitary somatotrophs to stimulate GH synthesis and secretion. The critical difference is the Drug Affinity Complex (DAC), a reactive N-hydroxysuccinimide ester linker attached to the peptide that covalently and irreversibly binds to circulating serum albumin after injection.

Albumin is the most abundant plasma protein with a half-life of approximately 19 days. By permanently conjugating to albumin, the DAC moiety transforms CJC-1295 from a short-acting peptide (30-minute half-life) into a long-circulating molecule with a half-life of 6-8 days. The albumin-bound peptide continuously activates GHRH receptors as it circulates, producing a sustained elevation of GH levels rather than discrete pulses.

This sustained GH elevation is both the advantage and disadvantage of the DAC version. The convenience of weekly dosing is appealing, and total GH output over time may be higher. However, continuous GHRH receptor stimulation can lead to receptor desensitization (tachyphylaxis), and the loss of natural pulsatility may reduce the efficiency of GH signaling at target tissues. Somatostatin — the hypothalamic hormone that normally creates the troughs between GH pulses — is partially overridden by continuous receptor stimulation, which blunts the natural feedback regulation. Some practitioners also express concern that sustained GH elevation more closely mimics the pathological hormone profile of acromegaly than the healthy pulsatile pattern.

Cortagen

Cortagen (Ala-Glu-Asp-Pro) is a synthetic tetrapeptide belonging to the Khavinson family of peptide bioregulators — short peptides proposed to regulate gene expression in a tissue-specific manner. The bioregulator hypothesis, developed by Professor Vladimir Khavinson over decades of research at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology, proposes that short peptides (2-4 amino acids) can penetrate cell membranes and nuclear envelopes, interact directly with DNA in a sequence-specific manner, and modulate transcription of tissue-relevant genes.

Cortagen is specifically designed to target neurons of the cerebral cortex. According to the Khavinson model, the AEDP tetrapeptide sequence has complementarity to specific DNA sequences in gene promoter regions active in cortical neurons. Upon binding to these regulatory elements, Cortagen is proposed to modulate chromatin structure and transcription factor access, influencing the expression of genes involved in neuronal function, synaptic transmission, antioxidant defense, and protein synthesis. The tissue specificity — cortex rather than other brain regions or body tissues — is attributed to the unique chromatin accessibility and transcription factor environment in cortical neurons that determines which genes are available for regulation.

Preclinical studies from Russian research programs have reported that Cortagen treatment improves cognitive function, enhances learning and memory, and provides neuroprotection in models of cerebral ischemia and age-related cognitive decline. The proposed mechanism involves restoration of age-related declines in protein synthesis in cortical neurons, enhancement of antioxidant enzyme expression (SOD, catalase, GPx), and improved synaptic function through upregulation of synaptophysin and other synaptic proteins. It should be noted that the peptide bioregulator field remains controversial in Western pharmacology — while the Russian research program is extensive, the proposed direct DNA-binding mechanism has not been independently validated through the standard molecular biology methods expected in Western peer-reviewed literature.

Risks & Safety

CJC-1295 with DAC

Common

water retention/bloating, tingling and numbness in hands and feet, joint pain, headache, injection site reactions.

Serious

elevated cortisol, desensitisation from constant GH signal over time, reduced insulin sensitivity with prolonged use.

Rare

allergic reactions, significant swelling.

Cortagen

Common

mild headache, temporary fatigue during initial use.

Serious

limited Western safety data, most evidence comes from Russian-language literature, no long-term data on repeated use.

Rare

allergic reactions.

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