Quick Comparison
| LL-37 | MGF | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 4-6 hours (varies by tissue environment) | 5-7 minutes |
| Typical Dosage | Research: 50-200 mcg subcutaneous once daily. Topical formulations also used for wound healing applications. No standardized clinical dosing established. | 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 or topical | Intramuscular injection (site-specific, post-workout) |
| Research Papers | 30 papers | 30 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
LL-37
LL-37 is the only cathelicidin-derived antimicrobial peptide in humans, cleaved from the precursor protein hCAP-18 by proteinase 3 in neutrophil granules. It functions as a critical component of the innate immune system's first line of defense, with both direct antimicrobial activity and sophisticated immunomodulatory signaling.
The direct antimicrobial mechanism relies on LL-37's amphipathic alpha-helical structure — one face is positively charged (cationic) while the other is hydrophobic. The cationic face electrostatically attracts the negatively charged phospholipid headgroups of bacterial membranes (which differ from mammalian membranes in their lipid composition and charge distribution). Once bound, the hydrophobic face inserts into the lipid bilayer, creating pores or disrupting membrane integrity through a 'carpet' or 'toroidal pore' mechanism. This physical membrane disruption kills bacteria, fungi, and enveloped viruses rapidly and is difficult for microbes to develop resistance against, unlike conventional antibiotics that target specific enzymes.
The immunomodulatory functions are equally important. LL-37 acts as a chemoattractant for neutrophils, monocytes, and T cells through formyl peptide receptor-like 1 (FPRL1) activation, recruiting immune cells to infection sites. It promotes macrophage phagocytosis and enhances the killing capacity of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Critically, LL-37 neutralizes bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS/endotoxin), preventing the cytokine storm that leads to sepsis. It also stimulates angiogenesis through VEGF upregulation and promotes wound re-epithelialization by activating epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) transactivation. LL-37 production is upregulated by vitamin D (which is why vitamin D status affects innate immunity), and its expression is found in skin, airways, the gastrointestinal tract, and virtually all epithelial barrier tissues.
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
LL-37
Common
injection site inflammation, local redness and swelling.
Serious
at high doses it can worsen inflammation instead of calming it; may trigger or worsen autoimmune conditions like psoriasis, lupus, or atherosclerosis.
Rare
body-wide inflammatory response, allergic reactions. Effects depend on dose — low doses calm inflammation, high doses can increase it.
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
LL-37 →
The body's main antimicrobial peptide — a natural part of the immune system that fights bacteria, viruses, and fungi. Beyond fighting germs, it promotes wound healing, helps regulate inflammation, and stimulates new blood vessel growth at injury sites. The body makes it in response to infection or tissue damage. People use it for wound healing and immune support.
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.