MGF (Mechano Growth Factor) vs Thymulin

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.

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Thymulin

Thymulin (Facteur Thymique Sérique) is a zinc-dependent nonapeptide hormone produced by thymic epithelial cells. It plays important roles in T-cell differentiation and immune system maturation.

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Side-by-Side Comparison

AspectMGF (Mechano Growth Factor)Thymulin
MechanismActivates muscle satellite cells (stem cells) and promotes their proliferation without differentiation, priming them for fusion with existing muscle fibers during repair and growth.Requires zinc for biological activity. Promotes T-cell differentiation, modulates cytokine production, and influences neuroendocrine function. Levels decline significantly with age.
Typical DosageDue to extremely short half-life (minutes), typical protocols use 100-200mcg injected directly into target muscles immediately post-workout.Research protocols vary. Often studied alongside zinc supplementation. Typical research doses in the microgram range.
AdministrationIntramuscular injection into trained muscles within minutes of workout completion. Must be used immediately after reconstitution due to instability.Subcutaneous or intramuscular injection in research settings. Requires adequate zinc status for activity.
Side EffectsInjection site soreness, potential hypoglycemia, localized swelling. Short half-life limits systemic effects.Limited data on exogenous administration. Theoretical effects on immune function require monitoring.
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Key Differences

Unique to MGF (Mechano Growth Factor):

Unique to Thymulin:

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