Why Proper Peptide Storage Matters
Research peptides are sensitive molecules that can degrade when exposed to heat, moisture, light, or repeated freeze-thaw cycles. Proper storage is essential to maintaining peptide integrity and ensuring reliable, reproducible research results. This guide covers storage best practices for both lyophilized (freeze-dried) and reconstituted peptide preparations.
Key Takeaways
- Lyophilized peptides: store at -20°C or colder, protected from light and moisture
- Reconstituted peptides: store at 2-8°C, use within recommended timeframe
- Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles — aliquot into single-use portions
- Allow vials to reach room temperature before opening to prevent condensation
- Use sterile technique when handling reconstituted peptides
Storing Lyophilized (Unreconstituted) Peptides
Lyophilized peptides are the most stable form of peptide storage. The freeze-drying process removes nearly all water content, dramatically slowing chemical degradation processes like oxidation, hydrolysis, and deamidation.
Recommended Conditions
- Temperature: -20°C (standard freezer) is ideal for most peptides. For long-term storage exceeding 12 months, -80°C ultra-low freezers provide additional stability.
- Light: Store in opaque or amber containers, or keep original packaging. UV light can cause photo-degradation of certain amino acid residues (particularly tryptophan, tyrosine, and phenylalanine).
- Moisture: Keep vials sealed with desiccant packets when possible. Moisture reintroduction can initiate hydrolysis reactions.
- Atmosphere: Inert gas (nitrogen or argon) purging of vials reduces oxidation risk, though this is typically more relevant for bulk storage.
Shelf Life
Under proper storage conditions at -20°C, most lyophilized peptides maintain integrity for 2-3 years. Some exceptionally stable peptides can last longer, while peptides containing methionine or cysteine residues (susceptible to oxidation) may have shorter optimal storage windows.
Storing Reconstituted Peptides
Once a lyophilized peptide is reconstituted (dissolved in solvent), its stability decreases significantly compared to the dry powder form.
Recommended Conditions
- Temperature: Refrigerate at 2-8°C for active use. For longer-term storage of reconstituted peptides, freeze at -20°C in aliquots.
- Timeframe: Most reconstituted peptides should be used within 2-4 weeks when refrigerated. Frozen aliquots may last 1-3 months depending on the peptide.
- Container: Use sterile, low-binding tubes or the original vial. Avoid glass for small volumes as peptides can adsorb to glass surfaces.
Aliquoting Best Practice
To avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles, divide reconstituted peptide into single-use aliquots immediately after reconstitution:
- Reconstitute the full vial using sterile technique
- Calculate the volume per aliquot based on your experimental needs
- Transfer aliquots to sterile, labeled tubes
- Flash-freeze aliquots (liquid nitrogen) or place directly in -20°C freezer
- Thaw only the aliquot needed for each experiment
Storage by Peptide Type
Different peptide categories may have specific storage considerations:
Growth Hormone Secretagogues
Peptides like Ipamorelin, Sermorelin, and Tesamorelin follow standard storage protocols. Store lyophilized at -20°C. These peptides are generally stable in the lyophilized form.
Cytoprotective Peptides
BPC-157 is notably stable even at low pH, making it one of the more robust peptides for storage. TB-500 follows standard lyophilized storage at -20°C.
Copper Peptides
GHK-Cu contains a copper ion that can participate in redox reactions. Store away from strong oxidizers and in sealed containers to prevent copper oxidation. Standard -20°C storage is appropriate.
NAD+ and Large Molecules
NAD+ is a coenzyme rather than a traditional peptide. It is hygroscopic (absorbs moisture from air) and should be kept sealed with desiccant. Store at -20°C and minimize exposure to ambient air.
Common Storage Mistakes
- Opening cold vials immediately — Allow lyophilized vials to reach room temperature before opening. Cold glass attracts condensation, introducing moisture to the dry powder.
- Repeated freeze-thaw cycles — Each cycle causes ice crystal formation that can damage peptide structure. Aliquot to avoid this.
- Storing in direct light — UV exposure degrades peptides. Keep in original packaging or dark storage.
- Using non-sterile technique — Bacterial contamination degrades peptide solutions. Use sterile needles, solvents, and containers.
- Storing at room temperature — Even lyophilized peptides degrade faster at room temperature. Always refrigerate or freeze.
Reconstitution Solvents
The choice of solvent affects storage stability of reconstituted peptides:
- Bacteriostatic water — Most common choice. The 0.9% benzyl alcohol preservative inhibits bacterial growth, extending usable life.
- Sterile water — Suitable for immediate use. Without preservative, bacterial contamination risk increases over time.
- Sterile saline (0.9% NaCl) — Used when isotonic conditions are required for the research application.
For step-by-step reconstitution instructions, see our guide: How to Reconstitute Lyophilized Powders.
For a comprehensive overview of research peptides, see: What Are Research Peptides?
All peptides referenced in this guide are sold by 13 Peptides for research and laboratory use only. Not for human consumption. See our FAQ and Glossary for more information.


