Quick Comparison
| CJC-1295 (no DAC) | Crystagen | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 0.5 hours | Approximately 30 minutes (acute pharmacology); proposed gene-expression effects outlast plasma exposure |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 100-300 mcg subcutaneous once to three times daily, typically before bed and/or upon waking. Often combined with Ipamorelin 200-300 mcg in the same injection. Cycled 5 days on, 2 days off, or continuously for 8-12 weeks. | Oral (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 cycling protocol. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection | Oral capsule or subcutaneous injection (cycled) |
| Research Papers | 0 papers | 1 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
CJC-1295 (no DAC)
CJC-1295 (no DAC), also known as Mod GRF 1-29, is a synthetic analogue of the first 29 amino acids of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH). Four amino acid substitutions (at positions 2, 8, 15, and 27) have been made to increase resistance to enzymatic degradation while preserving full biological activity at the GHRH receptor (GHRH-R), a G protein-coupled receptor expressed on somatotroph cells in the anterior pituitary.
When CJC-1295 binds the GHRH receptor, it activates the Gs alpha subunit, which stimulates adenylyl cyclase to produce cyclic AMP (cAMP). Rising cAMP levels activate protein kinase A (PKA), which phosphorylates CREB (cAMP response element-binding protein) and other transcription factors that drive GH gene expression and secretion. Importantly, this mechanism preserves the natural pulsatile pattern of GH release because it works within the existing hypothalamic-pituitary feedback loop — somatostatin still provides inhibitory regulation between pulses.
The key advantage of the no-DAC version over the DAC version is this preservation of pulsatility. Because its half-life is approximately 30 minutes, it produces a discrete GH pulse that rises and falls naturally, mimicking the body's own secretory pattern. This pulsatile pattern is believed to be physiologically superior to sustained elevation because GH receptor sensitivity is maintained between pulses, and the liver's IGF-1 production response is optimized by intermittent rather than continuous GH stimulation. This is why CJC-1295 (no DAC) is often preferred by practitioners despite requiring more frequent dosing.
Crystagen
Crystagen is a short Khavinson tripeptide (Glu-Asp-Pro) positioned as the immune and thymus-targeted bioregulator within the wider Khavinson peptide family. The proposed mechanism follows the standard family framework: short peptides interact with gene promoter sequences in thymic and lymphocyte cell nuclei, modulating expression of genes involved in T cell maturation, cytokine production, and broader immune regulation.
Proposed effects include support for thymic function — particularly relevant given the well-documented age-related thymic involution that contributes to immunosenescence in older adults — alongside modulation of lymphocyte chromatin organisation and immune cell maturation pathways. Russian research has reported crystagen-induced improvements in lymphocyte counts, T helper cell function, and clinical recovery from infections in elderly populations and in patients recovering from immunosuppressive treatments. The peptide is often used alongside thymalin (a related thymic peptide preparation also in this database) as part of broader Khavinson immune-support protocols.
As with the rest of the Khavinson family, the efficacy evidence base sits within Russian gerontology and immunology research with limited independent Western validation. Crystagen is not validated as a treatment for primary immunodeficiency, HIV-related immune dysfunction, or other formally diagnosed immune conditions, and should not displace evidence-based immune therapy. The brief plasma half-life (around 30 minutes) reflects the proposed model of transient signalling triggering longer-lasting transcriptional changes in immune cell populations.
Risks & Safety
CJC-1295 (no DAC)
Common
facial flushing, headache, dizziness, injection site irritation.
Serious
overworking the pituitary gland with excessive doses, theoretical risk of promoting existing tumours through elevated growth hormone.
Rare
allergic reactions, fainting.
Crystagen
Common
generally reported as well tolerated.
Serious
very limited Western clinical data; theoretical concern with use in autoimmune disease (immune-modulating peptides may unpredictably affect autoimmune activity).
Rare
allergic reactions. Should not replace evidence-based immune therapy in serious immunodeficiency.
Full Profiles
CJC-1295 (no DAC) →
One of the most popular growth hormone peptides, often called Mod GRF 1-29. Instead of injecting growth hormone directly, this tells your pituitary gland to release more of its own GH naturally. This is considered healthier than injecting GH directly because your body keeps its normal feedback systems intact. Usually combined with Ipamorelin for much stronger effects — the two work together better than either alone.
Crystagen →
A Khavinson tripeptide (Glu-Asp-Pro) developed in Russia as a tissue-specific bioregulator targeting the thymus and broader immune system. Promoted for age-related immune decline (immunosenescence), recovery from immunosuppressive treatments, and as a general immune support during the cold and flu season. Within the same Khavinson family as thymalin and thymosin alpha-1, both already in your database.