MGF (Mechano Growth Factor) vs SHLP2
A detailed comparison to help you understand the differences and choose the right peptide for your research goals.
MGF (Mechano Growth Factor)
MGF (Mechano Growth Factor) is a splice variant of IGF-1 that is produced locally in muscle tissue in response to mechanical stress. The non-PEGylated form has a very short half-life.
Full details →SHLP2
SHLP2 (Small Humanin-Like Peptide 2) is a mitochondrial-derived peptide similar to humanin. It has shown insulin-sensitizing and cytoprotective effects in research, with potential metabolic benefits.
Full details →Side-by-Side Comparison
| Aspect | MGF (Mechano Growth Factor) | SHLP2 |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Activates muscle satellite cells (stem cells) and promotes their proliferation without differentiation, priming them for fusion with existing muscle fibers during repair and growth. | Enhances insulin sensitivity and glucose uptake. Provides cytoprotective effects similar to humanin. May act through similar but distinct receptor pathways. |
| Typical Dosage | Due to extremely short half-life (minutes), typical protocols use 100-200mcg injected directly into target muscles immediately post-workout. | Research compound with doses in the microgram to low milligram range studied in animal models. Human dosing not established. |
| Administration | Intramuscular injection into trained muscles within minutes of workout completion. Must be used immediately after reconstitution due to instability. | Subcutaneous or intraperitoneal injection in research settings. Various SHLP analogs (1-6) have different properties. |
| Side Effects | Injection site soreness, potential hypoglycemia, localized swelling. Short half-life limits systemic effects. | Limited data. Animal studies suggest good tolerability. May affect glucose metabolism. |
| Best For |