Cole, a Bionik Wellness ambassador and elite PT from West London, shares insights into the world of Energy & Performance Research Peptides and their growing role within advanced biohacking and performance-focused research communities.
Energy and performance peptides are research compounds studied for their potential to support recovery pathways, endurance, metabolic efficiency, growth hormone signalling, mitochondrial function, and physical performance optimisation. Within the performance and longevity space, these peptides are widely researched for their ability to support high-output lifestyles, intense training protocols, and recovery-focused routines.
Popular Energy & Performance Research Peptides include:
CJC-1295 (No DAC)
Studied for its role in stimulating natural growth hormone signalling and supporting recovery, sleep quality, and performance optimisation.
Ipamorelin
A selective growth hormone secretagogue researched for recovery support, lean tissue research, and performance-focused protocols.
MOTS-c
A mitochondrial-derived peptide investigated for metabolic flexibility, cellular energy production, endurance support, and exercise-mimicking mechanisms.
5-Amino-1MQ
Researched within body composition and metabolic optimisation studies for its potential role in energy utilisation and fat metabolism pathways.
AOD-9604
A peptide fragment studied for fat metabolism and performance-focused body composition research.
BPC-157 & TB-500 (The Wolverine Stack)
Widely researched within recovery and performance communities for soft tissue recovery, mobility, and training optimisation support.
At Bionik Wellness, we explore the future of advanced wellness, longevity, and performance research through premium-quality research peptides designed for serious researchers, biohackers, and high-performance lifestyles.
Important Positioning
All compounds referenced are supplied strictly for laboratory research purposes only.
They are not intended for human or veterinary use, and no performance or therapeutic outcomes are implied.
