Research Resources

MOTS-c Research Overview: Mitochondrial-Derived Peptides, Muscle Signaling, and Aging-Related Pathways
MOTS-c Research Overview: Mitochondrial-Derived Peptides, Muscle Signaling, and Aging-Related Pathways
Dive into the published dissection of MOTS-C which has become a growing interest in metabolic, muscle, and aging related research. Published studies have examined MOTS-c in cell-culture systems and animal... Read more...
How Product Labels Support Research-Use Compliance
How Product Labels Support Research-Use Compliance Product labeling is one of the most visible and important parts of a research compound supplier’s compliance framework. For laboratories sourcing research-use-only materials, a well-constructed label does more than identify what is inside a container. It establishes the legal and operational boundaries for how that material should be used, handled, stored, and documented. Understanding what information a compliant research compound label should contain helps researchers evaluate suppliers and maintain proper documentation standards. The Role of Labeling in RUO Compliance In the United States, research-use-only... Read more...
Shipping Considerations for Temperature-Sensitive Materials
Shipping Considerations for Temperature-Sensitive Materials Research-grade peptides and analytical compounds can be sensitive to temperature changes during transit. A compound that is carefully stored at -20°C in a laboratory may still be exposed to variable environmental conditions during shipping. This makes packaging design, transit time, and receipt procedures important parts of maintaining material quality from supplier to laboratory. Understanding how temperature-sensitive research materials are shipped, and what to do when they arrive, helps support a documented and compliant research supply chain. Why Temperature Matters During Shipping Lyophilized peptide powders are... Read more...
Understanding Batch Numbers and Documentation
Understanding Batch Numbers and Documentation In any documented research program, the ability to trace a material back to its specific production origin is essential. Batch numbers, also called lot numbers, are the identifiers that make this traceability possible. Understanding what batch numbers represent and how to record them in laboratory documentation is an important part of maintaining a compliant, auditable research operation. What a Batch Number Is A batch number is a unique alphanumeric identifier assigned to a specific production run of a compound. Every unit of material produced during... Read more...
Laboratory Handling Guidelines for Research Materials
Laboratory Handling Guidelines for Research Materials Proper laboratory handling of research compounds is both a safety responsibility and a requirement for producing reliable, reproducible data. Contamination, improper technique, or inadequate protective equipment can compromise the integrity of the research material and affect the accuracy of experimental results. The following guidelines apply to the general handling of research-grade peptides and analytical compounds in controlled laboratory environments. These materials are supplied for in vitro laboratory research and analytical evaluation only. They are not intended for human use, animal use, medical use, diagnostic... Read more...
Why Third-Party Testing Matters
Why Third-Party Testing Matters When a research compound supplier claims a specific purity percentage or analytical profile for a product, that claim is only as credible as the testing process behind it. For researchers building documented, reproducible laboratory programs, understanding the difference between in-house testing and third-party independent verification is important for evaluating supplier quality, documentation reliability, and research integrity. First-Party vs. Third-Party Testing First-party testing refers to analytical evaluation performed by the manufacturer or supplier itself. Internal quality control can serve an important function, but self-reported testing has a... Read more...
Lyophilized Powder Storage Guidelines
Lyophilized Powder Storage Guidelines Most research-grade peptides are supplied in lyophilized form, meaning they are prepared as a freeze-dried powder. This format helps improve shelf life and stability compared to liquid formulations. While lyophilization is designed to improve a compound’s durability during storage and shipping, proper handling and storage practices are still essential for maintaining documented purity, traceability, and analytical integrity throughout laboratory research use. What Lyophilization Does Lyophilization, also called freeze-drying, removes water from a compound under vacuum conditions after it has been frozen. The result is a dry,... Read more...
What HPLC Purity Means in Laboratory Research
What HPLC Purity Means in Laboratory Research When evaluating research compounds, purity is one of the most important specifications a laboratory researcher must review. One of the most widely used methods for assessing the purity of peptides and small molecules in research-grade materials is High-Performance Liquid Chromatography, commonly abbreviated as HPLC. Understanding what HPLC purity means, how it is measured, and what it tells you about a compound is essential for maintaining research integrity, documentation standards, and batch traceability. What HPLC Measures HPLC is an analytical chromatography technique used to... Read more...
What Does "Research Use Only" Mean?
What Does “Research Use Only” Mean? If you have spent any time sourcing research compounds, you have likely encountered the designation Research Use Only, often abbreviated as RUO. For laboratories, institutions, and independent researchers working with peptides and analytical compounds, understanding what this label means is essential for maintaining compliant, documented research operations. The Research Use Only designation defines how a material should be handled, documented, stored, and applied within a controlled laboratory setting. It is not a marketing phrase, and it is not a flexible disclaimer. It establishes the... Read more...
How to Read a Certificate of Analysis
How to Read a Certificate of Analysis A Certificate of Analysis, often called a COA, is one of the most important documents associated with laboratory research materials. It provides batch-specific analytical information that helps researchers review identity, purity, testing method, and documentation details before using a material in a controlled research environment. This guide explains the main sections commonly found on a COA and how to interpret them from a research-use-only perspective. What Is a Certificate of Analysis? A Certificate of Analysis is a document that summarizes analytical testing results... Read more...