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BPC-157 + TB-500

Body Protection Compound-157 + Thymosin Beta-4

Research Use Only

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BPC-157 + TB-500 Overview

The BPC-157 + TB-500 blend combines two synthetic peptides studied for their signaling pathway interactions. BPC-157 is known for its potential effects on molecular signaling, structural remodeling, and cytokine modulation, while TB-500 (a fragment of Thymosin Beta-4) is associated with epithelial modeling, angiogenesis, and extracellular matrix dynamics. Together, they may provide complementary activity across multiple pathways in controlled experimental settings.

History

The concept of the BPC-157 + TB-500 blend stems from parallel lines of peptide research tracing back to foundational discoveries in molecular biology. BPC-157, deriving from a natural protein fragment in gastric tissue, was first synthesized to investigate its signaling and remodeling effects on structural and epithelial systems. Meanwhile, Thymosin β-4 (Tβ4)—and its synthetic fragment TB-500—originated from the discovery of thymosins in the 1960s by Allan L. Goldstein and colleagues, leading to interest in Tβ4’s role in extracellular matrix dynamics and pathway modeling.

BPC-157 Structure

CAS #: 137525-51-0

Molecular Formula: C₆₂H₉₈N₁₆O₂₂

Molecular Weight: 1419.556 g/mol

PubChem ID: 108101

TB-500 Structure

CAS #: 77591-33-4

Molecular Formula: C₆₂H₉₈N₁₆O₂₂

Molecular Weight: 1419.556 g/mol

PubChem ID: 108101

Research Findings

BPC-157 and TB-500 have been studied in structural, vascular, epithelial, and systemic models, with research exploring their effects on tendon-to-bone interface modeling, collagen organization, angiogenesis, molecular migration, and systemic signaling. These findings highlight their roles in matrix dynamics, vascular pathways, and pathway activity in preclinical settings.

Key Areas of Resarch:

  • Structural: Tendon-to-bone, collagen, matrix

  • Vascular: Angiogenesis, nitric oxide, remodeling

  • Epithelial: Migration, signaling, matrix

  • Systemic: Gastric, survival, pathway dynamics

Together, these findings suggest broad experimental applications for BPC-157 and TB-500 across multiple biological pathways. Their combined influence on collagen synthesis, vascular formation, cytokine modulation, and systemic signaling provides a versatile foundation for research into molecular remodeling, pathway dynamics, and experimental biology.

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