Also known as · Pegylated mechano growth factor

PEG-MGF

Muscle repair peptide; preclinical recovery evidence.

What it is

PEG-MGF (pegylated mechano growth factor) is a synthetic peptide based on a splice variant of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1Ec, also called mechano growth factor or MGF). The “PEG” refers to polyethylene glycol modification that extends the peptide’s half-life.

Mechano growth factor was identified as an IGF-1 splice variant produced specifically in response to mechanical stimulation of muscle tissue. The hypothesis was that MGF mediates muscle hypertrophy responses to exercise, and that exogenous MGF (or its synthetic analog) could support muscle recovery and repair.

PEG-MGF is not FDA-approved for any indication and has only limited preclinical research. It is available through licensed compounding pharmacies but the evidence base is much thinner than for established recovery peptides.

Mechanism of action

The proposed mechanism centers on MGF’s role in muscle satellite cell activation, fiber repair, and hypertrophy responses to mechanical loading. PEG-MGF is hypothesized to provide these effects systemically when administered exogenously. The PEGylation extends half-life from minutes (native MGF) to hours, supporting practical dosing intervals.

Clinical evidence

The clinical evidence base for PEG-MGF is limited. Most research has been preclinical. Human clinical trials evaluating muscle recovery, hypertrophy, or recovery applications are largely absent. Clinical use is informed primarily by the mechanistic hypothesis and practitioner experience.

Why we don’t prescribe it at The Tide

For recovery and tissue repair indications, we prefer peptides with substantially stronger evidence bases:

  • BPC-157 has hundreds of preclinical studies and accumulated clinical experience
  • TB-500 has the broader thymosin beta-4 research base, including human trials in cardiac and dermatologic applications
  • PDRN has extensive Italian and Korean clinical evidence

PEG-MGF’s evidence base does not justify selecting it over these better-characterized alternatives. The hypothesis behind PEG-MGF is interesting but not yet validated by the kind of clinical research that supports current best-practice prescribing.

Side effects and contraindications

Side effect profile is poorly characterized due to limited human use. Theoretical concerns about IGF-1-related growth signaling raise caution in patients with malignancy or active growth-related conditions. Avoided in pregnancy, breastfeeding, malignancy, and patients with significant medical comorbidities given limited safety data.

Related peptides

From the same category.

BPC-157

Body Protective Compound · PL 14736

A 15-amino-acid peptide with strong preclinical evidence for soft-tissue and gut repair.

TB-500

Thymosin Beta-4 fragment

Cell migration, angiogenesis, and soft-tissue repair.