Research Library

The papers behind the products.

Every compound on our shelf is here because of published, peer-reviewed research. Below: the foundational papers we point to for each. Inclusion is informational — none of this constitutes medical advice or therapeutic claims.

BPC-157

Body Protection Compound 157
Healing & recovery

Synthetic pentadecapeptide derived from a sequence in human gastric juice. The most extensively studied research peptide for in-vitro tendon, ligament, and gut tissue work.

References

TB-500

Thymosin Beta-4 fragment
Healing & recovery

Synthetic version of a naturally occurring peptide. Research literature focuses on tissue regeneration, actin sequestration, and angiogenesis.

References

CJC-1295 (DAC)

GHRH analog with Drug Affinity Complex
GH axis

Long-acting growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analog. The DAC modification extends half-life to ~8 days, producing sustained pulsatile GH release in published research.

References

Ipamorelin

Selective GH secretagogue
GH axis

First selective ghrelin-receptor agonist studied. Research literature emphasizes its specificity for GH release without affecting cortisol, prolactin, or ACTH at typical study doses.

References

MK-677 (Ibutamoren)

Oral ghrelin mimetic
GH axis

Non-peptide ghrelin receptor agonist active orally. Two-year clinical research has examined sustained GH and IGF-1 elevation in older adult populations.

References
Combination research

Compounds studied together in the literature.

Some research peptides appear together in the published literature because their mechanisms overlap or complement. Below: published studies for the compounds we sell as multi-vial research stacks. The references describe what the studies investigated — not how anyone should use these materials.

BPC-157 + TB-500 Stack compounds

BPC-157 + TB-500 — Combination tissue-repair literature

Multiple published studies have investigated BPC-157 and TB-500 in parallel tissue-repair models, noting complementary mechanisms — BPC-157 research has focused on angiogenesis and growth-factor receptor expression, while TB-500 literature emphasizes actin sequestration, cell migration, and angiogenesis. Inclusion here is purely informational; the studies below describe in-vitro and animal-model research.

References
View the BPC-157 + TB-500 Stack → These compounds are available together as a research stack.
CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin + MK-677 Stack compounds

CJC-1295 (DAC) + Ipamorelin + MK-677 — GH-axis combination literature

Published pharmacokinetic research has characterized each of these GH-axis compounds independently — CJC-1295 (DAC) as a long-acting GHRH analog producing sustained pulsatile GH release, Ipamorelin as a selective ghrelin-receptor agonist with a clean specificity profile in early studies, and MK-677 as an orally active non-peptide ghrelin mimetic with multi-year clinical research on GH and IGF-1 elevation. Their combined investigation in the literature reflects overlap in mechanism rather than any combined-protocol recommendation by Roji.

References
View the CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin + MK-677 Stack → These compounds are available together as a research stack.
Reminder

Research references, not therapeutic claims.

The papers above describe published in-vitro and in-vivo research. Their inclusion on this page is informational only and does not represent a claim by Roji Peptides that any product is intended to diagnose, treat, cure, mitigate, or prevent any disease. All products are sold for in-vitro laboratory research and identification purposes only. Read the full disclaimer.