Quick Comparison

CJC-1295 (no DAC)Humanin
Half-Life0.5 hours0.5-4 hours (varies by analogue; HNG has extended activity)
Typical DosageStandard: 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.No established clinical dosing. Research analogue (HNG — humanin G): most commonly used form. User-reported: 1-5 mg subcutaneous once daily. Often cycled 4-8 weeks.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injectionSubcutaneous injection (research)
Research Papers0 papers30 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.

Humanin

Humanin is a 24-amino-acid peptide (MAPRGFSCLLLLTSEIDLPVKRRA) encoded within the 16S ribosomal RNA gene of the mitochondrial genome. Its discovery in 2001 was revolutionary — it was the first identified mitochondrial-derived peptide (MDP), challenging the long-held dogma that the mitochondrial genome only encodes 13 oxidative phosphorylation subunits, 22 tRNAs, and 2 rRNAs. Humanin, along with MOTS-C and the SHLP peptides discovered later, established mitochondria as endocrine organelles.

Humanin exerts cytoprotective effects through multiple mechanisms. Extracellularly, it binds to a trimeric receptor complex composed of CNTFR (ciliary neurotrophic factor receptor alpha), WSX-1 (IL-27 receptor alpha), and gp130 (the shared signaling subunit of the IL-6 receptor family). Activation of this complex triggers JAK/STAT3 signaling, which drives expression of anti-apoptotic genes (Bcl-2, Mcl-1) and cell survival programs. Intracellularly, humanin interacts directly with two pro-apoptotic proteins: it binds IGFBP-3, preventing IGFBP-3 from translocating to mitochondria and initiating apoptosis; and it binds BAX (Bcl-2-associated X protein), preventing BAX oligomerization and insertion into the outer mitochondrial membrane — the critical step in the intrinsic (mitochondrial) apoptosis pathway that releases cytochrome c and activates caspases.

Humanin also reduces cellular stress through multiple pathways. It decreases reactive oxygen species (ROS) production by optimizing mitochondrial electron transport chain function. It reduces endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress by modulating the unfolded protein response (UPR). It improves insulin sensitivity through STAT3-mediated effects on hypothalamic signaling and peripheral insulin receptor substrate phosphorylation. Circulating humanin levels decline with age (approximately 40% reduction between youth and old age) and are inversely correlated with markers of age-related disease, suggesting that humanin decline contributes to the increased cellular vulnerability and apoptosis susceptibility seen in aging. Its most potent synthetic analogue, HNG (S14G-humanin), has a glycine-for-serine substitution at position 14 that increases cytoprotective potency approximately 1,000-fold.

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.

Humanin

Common

injection site irritation, mild fatigue.

Serious

limited human safety data, may protect cancer cells from programmed death (BAX interaction), may affect IGF-1 signaling.

Rare

allergic reactions.

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