Quick Comparison
| CJC-1295 with DAC | MGF | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 144-192 hours (6-8 days) | 5-7 minutes |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 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. | 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 (weekly) | Intramuscular injection (site-specific, post-workout) |
| Research Papers | 0 papers | 30 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.
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
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.
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
CJC-1295 with DAC →
The long-acting version of CJC-1295. After injection it attaches to a protein in your blood (albumin), which keeps it active for nearly a week instead of just 30 minutes. This means you only need to inject once a week. The trade-off is that it keeps growth hormone elevated constantly rather than in natural pulses, which some practitioners consider less ideal for your body. More convenient but potentially less natural than the no-DAC version.
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.