BPC-157 Peptide Calculator

BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound-157) is a synthetic pentadecapeptide derived from a protective protein found in gastric juice. It has been studied extensively in animal models for its regenerative properties on musculoskeletal and gastrointestinal tissue. Using a BPC-157 calculator ensures precise dosage preparation from lyophilized powder.

mg
ml
mcg

抽取单位

10

单位

浓度: 25 mcg/单位

注射器可视化

100 单位 最大

BPC-157 Dosage Chart

Common reconstitution scenarios for a 5mg vial. Use the BPC-157 calculator above to generate exact values for your setup.

Vial SizeBAC WaterConcentration250mcg =500mcg =
5mg1ml50.0 mcg/unit5.0 units10.0 units
5mg2ml25.0 mcg/unit10.0 units20.0 units
5mg3ml16.7 mcg/unit15.0 units30.0 units

Mechanism of Action

BPC-157 is believed to upregulate growth hormone receptor expression and promote angiogenesis via VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) signaling pathways. It also modulates the NO-system (nitric oxide), influences tendon-to-bone healing through the activation of the FAK-paxillin pathway, and exhibits cytoprotective effects on the gastric mucosa. Animal studies suggest systemic activity following both subcutaneous and oral administration.

How to Reconstitute BPC-157

  1. 1

    Allow the lyophilized BPC-157 vial to equilibrate to room temperature (approximately 15–20 minutes) to minimize condensation and thermal shock to the peptide.

  2. 2

    Using a sterile alcohol swab, clean the rubber stopper of both the peptide vial and the bacteriostatic water vial.

  3. 3

    Draw the desired volume of bacteriostatic water (BAC water) into a sterile insulin syringe. A common starting ratio is 2ml BAC water per 5mg vial—use the BPC-157 calculator above to confirm units for your target dosage.

  4. 4

    Insert the needle at an angle and inject the BAC water slowly down the inner glass wall of the peptide vial. Do not aim the stream directly at the lyophilized powder, as this can cause protein denaturation.

  5. 5

    Gently roll or swirl the vial between your fingers until the powder is fully dissolved. The solution should appear clear. Do not vortex or shake vigorously.

Storage & Safety for BPC-157

Pre-reconstitution (lyophilized)
Store lyophilized powder at −20°C for long-term (up to 24 months) or at 2–8°C for short-term storage (up to 3 months).
Post-reconstitution
Refrigerate reconstituted solution at 2–8°C. Use within 28 days.
Light sensitivity
Protect from direct light at all stages. Store in amber vials or wrapped in foil where possible.
Shelf life
Reconstituted solution: 28 days at 2–8°C. Discard if solution appears cloudy or contains particulates.

Current Research Focus

Current preclinical research is investigating BPC-157 dosage parameters for tendon and ligament repair models, intestinal fistula healing, and neuroprotective applications following traumatic brain injury. Researchers are also examining its interaction with the dopaminergic and serotonergic systems in rodent depression models.

Disclaimer

For research purposes only. Not for human consumption. This information is intended solely for licensed researchers and does not constitute medical advice.

This guide is for laboratory research use only. Not for human consumption or clinical use.

What Is BPC-157?

BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound-157) is a synthetic pentadecapeptide comprising 15 amino acids (Gly-Glu-Pro-Pro-Pro-Gly-Lys-Pro-Ala-Asp-Asp-Ala-Gly-Leu-Val). It is derived from a partial sequence of a cytoprotective protein isolated from human gastric juice—specifically from the body of BPC (Body Protection Compound), which was first described in research by Sikiric et al. in the 1990s. Unlike naturally sourced peptides, BPC-157 does not occur freely in this exact form in vivo; it is a truncated synthetic analog engineered for research-grade stability and bioavailability.

Its molecular weight is 1,419.5 Da. In preclinical models, intraperitoneal, subcutaneous, and oral routes have all demonstrated systemic activity—an unusual property among peptides, which are typically subject to proteolytic degradation in the gastrointestinal tract. This relative stability is attributed to its proline-rich sequence, which resists peptidase cleavage.

All references to dosage, administration routes, and biological effects in this guide pertain exclusively to preclinical animal and in vitro research. BPC-157 is not approved for human use by any regulatory agency.

Mechanism of Action

Angiogenesis and Vascular Remodeling

One of the most extensively documented mechanisms of BPC-157 in preclinical models is the promotion of angiogenesis—the formation of new blood vessels from existing vasculature. BPC-157 upregulates the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptor VEGFR2 (KDR/Flk-1) in endothelial cells, driving neovascularization at injury sites. This is particularly relevant in tendon and ligament repair models, where inadequate blood supply is a primary limiting factor in healing kinetics.

Additionally, BPC-157 activates the FAK-paxillin pathway—a focal adhesion kinase signaling cascade that regulates cytoskeletal reorganization and cell migration. In fibroblast cultures, this results in accelerated migration toward wound edges, a prerequisite for connective tissue repair. Egr-1 (early growth response protein 1), a zinc-finger transcription factor associated with growth factor gene expression, is also upregulated following BPC-157 exposure in tendon fibroblast assays.

The BPC-157 / Nitric Oxide (NO) System

A distinct and well-characterized axis involves BPC-157's modulation of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) system. In animal models of vascular injury and shock, BPC-157 has demonstrated the capacity to both activate and counteract NO overproduction depending on the pathological context—a phenomenon described as 'NO-system rescue.' Specifically, BPC-157 appears to restore NOS homeostasis following L-NAME (NOS inhibitor) or L-arginine (NOS substrate) challenge in rats, normalizing blood pressure and vascular tone. This bidirectional regulation suggests it acts on upstream regulatory elements of NOS expression rather than direct enzymatic modulation.

BPC-157 also interacts with the dopaminergic and serotonergic systems. It reduces the behavioral deficits associated with dopamine depletion (haloperidol-induced catalepsy) and attenuates serotonin-syndrome-like symptoms in rodent models, suggesting modulatory activity at neurotransmitter receptor or transporter levels—though the precise molecular targets remain under active investigation.

Reconstitution Deep Dive

Why Bacteriostatic Water (BAC Water)?

Bacteriostatic water for injection (BWFI) contains 0.9% benzyl alcohol as a preservative. The benzyl alcohol acts as a bacteriostatic agent—it inhibits bacterial growth without sterilizing the solution, allowing multi-dose use over an extended period (typically 28–30 days post-opening when refrigerated). For lyophilized peptide research preparations, BAC water is preferred over sterile water for injection (SWFI) because SWFI has no preservative and is intended for single-use only, making it impractical for multi-dose research protocols.

BPC-157 is chemically stable in BAC water at refrigerated temperatures. The slight acidity of BAC water (pH 4.5–7.0) is within the peptide's stability window and does not cause aggregation under normal research-storage conditions.

Vial Vacuum Physics: Why Technique Matters

Lyophilized peptide vials are sealed under vacuum or inert gas (typically nitrogen) to minimize oxidation and moisture re-entry. When you insert a needle, the pressure differential will draw BAC water into the vial if the needle tip is submerged—this rapid inrush creates turbulence that can mechanically denature the peptide through agitation-induced aggregation. The correct technique is to inject the BAC water slowly along the inner glass wall with the needle bevel pointing away from the powder, allowing the water to run down the glass as a thin film, equalizing pressure gradually before the liquid contacts the lyophilized cake.

Step-by-Step Reconstitution Math

The BPC-157 peptide calculator uses the following formula to determine concentration and units:

Concentration (mcg per unit)

(Peptide mg × 1,000) ÷ (BAC Water ml × 100)

Example: 5mg vial + 2ml BAC water → (5 × 1,000) ÷ (2 × 100) = 5,000 ÷ 200 = 25 mcg/unit

Units to draw for 250mcg dose

Desired dose (mcg) ÷ Concentration (mcg/unit)

250 ÷ 25 = 10 units on a 100-unit (1ml) insulin syringe

  • 1ml syringe (100 units): draw to the 10-unit mark for 250mcg.
  • 0.5ml syringe (50 units): draw to the 10-unit mark — same physical volume, same dose.
  • 0.3ml syringe (30 units): draw to the 10-unit mark — still valid, but approaching syringe maximum for this concentration.
  • Use the BPC-157 dosage calculator above to verify units for any vial size, BAC water volume, or target dose combination.

Clinical Research Summary

Tendon and Ligament Models

In rat Achilles tendon transection models, BPC-157 administration (both local and systemic) has been associated with faster tendon-to-bone reintegration, increased collagen fiber organization, and higher load-to-failure values compared to vehicle controls. Histological analyses in these studies showed increased vascularization and fibroblast density at repair sites, consistent with the VEGF/FAK-paxillin mechanisms described above. Multiple independent research groups have reproduced these findings in quadriceps, medial collateral ligament, and rotator cuff models.

Gastrointestinal Models

Given its origin from gastric juice, BPC-157's cytoprotective effects on the GI tract are among the most robust findings in preclinical literature. Studies in rodent models of NSAID-induced gastric ulcers, anastomosis leak, short bowel syndrome, and inflammatory bowel disease have consistently demonstrated accelerated mucosal healing, preservation of tight junction integrity, and reduced inflammatory infiltrate. The mechanism here involves modulation of prostaglandin synthesis, COX-2 expression, and the NO system at the mucosal level.

All findings above are derived from animal or in vitro studies. No controlled human clinical trials have been completed for BPC-157. Extrapolation of these results to human physiology requires formal clinical investigation.

Storage Science: Peptide Stability

Peptide stability is governed by three primary degradation pathways: hydrolysis (peptide bond cleavage), oxidation (particularly of methionine, cysteine, and tryptophan residues), and aggregation (intermolecular non-covalent or covalent crosslinking). BPC-157's proline-rich sequence confers resistance to hydrolysis but does not protect against oxidation or thermal degradation.

  • Room temperature (20–25°C): Lyophilized BPC-157 begins to show measurable degradation above 25°C within weeks. Not recommended for extended storage. Short-term transport (< 72 hours) is generally acceptable.
  • Refrigerated (2–8°C / 36–46°F): Optimal for reconstituted solution. Maintains peptide integrity for 28–30 days. For lyophilized powder, acceptable for up to 3 months.
  • Frozen (−20°C): Recommended for long-term lyophilized storage (up to 24 months). Do not freeze reconstituted solution—ice crystal formation physically disrupts peptide tertiary structure and can cause irreversible aggregation.
  • UV light: BPC-157 contains no aromatic residues (no Phe, Tyr, or Trp) but the peptide backbone and the benzyl alcohol preservative in BAC water are both susceptible to UV photolysis. Store in amber vials or foil-wrapped vials. Minimize exposure during preparation.
  • Agitation: Mechanical agitation promotes surface-induced denaturation and aggregation. Never vortex or shake. Use gentle swirling or inversion only.

Frequently Asked Questions

What if the BPC-157 solution is cloudy after reconstitution?

A correctly reconstituted BPC-157 solution should be clear and colorless. Cloudiness indicates one of three scenarios: (1) incomplete dissolution—allow additional time for gentle swirling; (2) peptide aggregation due to improper reconstitution technique (rapid injection, shaking, or incorrect solvent temperature); or (3) microbial contamination. If the cloudiness does not resolve after 10–15 minutes of gentle rolling, or if particulates remain visible, the vial should be discarded. Do not filter with standard syringe filters unless the filter membrane is validated for peptides at this molecular weight, as significant losses can occur.

Can BPC-157 and TB-500 be mixed in the same syringe?

In preclinical research, BPC-157 and TB-500 (Thymosin Beta-4 analog) are sometimes co-administered in combination protocols to study synergistic tissue repair effects. From a physicochemical standpoint, both peptides are stable in BAC water at physiological pH and there are no documented incompatibilities in published literature. However, combining two peptides in one syringe introduces compounding variables that complicate dosage precision and result interpretation. If a research protocol requires co-administration, drawing each peptide separately from its own vial into a single syringe immediately before use is methodologically preferable to pre-mixing vials. Stability of the combined solution has not been formally characterized, so pre-mixed solutions should not be stored.