Quick Comparison
| Crystagen | MK-677 | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Approximately 30 minutes (acute pharmacology); proposed gene-expression effects outlast plasma exposure | 24 hours |
| Typical Dosage | 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. | Standard: 10-25 mg oral once daily, typically before bed. Often cycled 8-12 weeks on, 4 weeks off. Some protocols use continuous low-dose (10 mg) for extended periods. |
| Administration | Oral capsule or subcutaneous injection (cycled) | Oral (capsule or liquid) |
| Research Papers | 1 papers | 5 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
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.
MK-677
MK-677 (Ibutamoren) is a non-peptide spiropiperidine compound that functions as a potent, orally active agonist of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a). Unlike peptide-based GH secretagogues that require injection, MK-677 is resistant to gastrointestinal degradation and has excellent oral bioavailability, making it unique among compounds that stimulate GH release through the ghrelin receptor.
Upon binding GHS-R1a in the anterior pituitary, MK-677 activates the Gq/11-coupled PLC/IP3/calcium signaling pathway, triggering GH vesicle exocytosis. It also acts on GHS-R1a receptors in the hypothalamus, stimulating GHRH neurons in the arcuate nucleus while suppressing somatostatin tone, further amplifying the GH secretory signal. Importantly, MK-677 preserves the endogenous pulsatile pattern of GH release — it amplifies pulse amplitude rather than creating a flat, sustained elevation.
The 24-hour half-life means a single daily dose maintains elevated GH and IGF-1 levels around the clock. In clinical studies, MK-677 increased IGF-1 levels by 40-60% in elderly subjects, with sustained effects over 12 months without significant tachyphylaxis. However, its ghrelin-mimetic activity also activates hypothalamic appetite circuits (orexigenic neurons expressing NPY/AgRP), producing the notable increase in hunger that many users report. The compound also has mild cortisol-raising effects and can impair insulin sensitivity with prolonged use, likely through sustained GH-mediated antagonism of insulin signaling in peripheral tissues. Despite promising clinical data for muscle wasting and osteoporosis, MK-677 has not completed the FDA approval process.
Risks & Safety
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.
MK-677
Common
increased appetite (often intense), water retention and bloating, tiredness and fatigue, joint pain, numbness in hands.
Serious
raised fasting blood sugar and reduced insulin sensitivity with long-term use, potential to accelerate existing tumour growth.
Rare
significant swelling, carpal tunnel syndrome.
Full Profiles
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.
MK-677 →
The only growth hormone booster you can take as a pill instead of injecting. Also known as Ibutamoren, it mimics the hunger hormone ghrelin to trigger GH release. Very popular because of the convenience — just swallow a capsule once daily. The major downside is a significant increase in appetite (you will feel hungry), and it stays active for 24 hours so the effects don't switch off. Studied for muscle wasting and bone density but never completed FDA approval.