the pentapeptide design
five residues, four design tricks, one receptor
how Novo Nordisk got from GHRP-1 to NNC 26-0161
Ipamorelin is the result of a deliberate truncation-and-substitution exercise on the GHRP-1 scaffold. The Hansen/Ankersen/Raun team at Novo Nordisk removed the central Ala-Trp dipeptide, replaced the N-terminal histidine with Aib, and kept two D-amino acids and a C-terminal amide. The whole sequence is five residues -- H-Aib-His-D-2-Nal-D-Phe-Lys-NH2 -- and every choice traces back to one of two goals: keep GHS-R1a affinity, drop everything that triggered cortisol or prolactin.
the pentapeptide, annotated
each residue with its MW contribution, design role, and the amide cap that closes the chain.
residue derivation builder
walk the structure residue-by-residue, swap in natural vs unnatural amino acids, and see what changes.
key terms
tap to expand.
A
D
D
L
S
D
five residues -- the simple version
why each position is where it is.
Position 1 is Aib. It is not a natural amino acid. Its job is to be a wall at the N-terminus that aminopeptidases cannot cut through. It also bends the molecule's first turn into a shape the receptor likes.
Position 2 is histidine -- the only fully natural residue in the sequence. The imidazole ring of histidine is conserved across the GHRP family because it makes specific contacts inside the receptor pocket. Positions 3 and 4 are D-2-Nal and D-Phe, bulky aromatic D-amino acids that fill the receptor's hydrophobic core while staying hidden from proteases that only recognize L-amino acids.
Position 5 is lysine, capped as a primary amide instead of the usual carboxylic acid. The amide blocks carboxypeptidase enzymes. Together, the N-terminal Aib and the C-terminal amide protect both ends of the chain -- which is why ipamorelin survives in plasma long enough to act, despite being just five residues.
truncation and substitution series
The Ankersen et al. J Med Chem 1998 paper (PMID 9733495) traced the evolution from GHRP-1 through ipamorelin. Removing the central Ala-Trp dipeptide cut the molecule from six residues to five without losing GH-releasing potency.
the selectivity-defining residue
Substituting Aib for the natural N-terminal histidine extended in vivo duration. Replacing L-Trp at position 3 with D-2-Nal preserved receptor engagement but eliminated the prolactin and ACTH release seen with natural-tryptophan analogs.
That single substitution at position 3 is the residue most responsible for the selectivity claim.
solid-phase peptide synthesis
Fmoc-SPPS on Rink amide resin, Applied Biosystems 431A FastMoc UV protocols, HBTU activation in NMP. Coupling order C-to-N: Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH, Fmoc-D-Phe-OH, Boc-D-2-Nal-OH, Boc-His(Trt)-OH, Boc-Aib-OH.
cleavage and purification
Final TFA cleavage with phenol/ethanedithiol/thioanisole/water scavengers (40:3:1:2:2). RP-HPLC purification typically delivers greater than 98% pure ipamorelin acetate.
the dominant impurity
The Aib coupling step has the highest deletion-sequence risk because its alpha-methyl group sterically hinders the activated ester approach. Des-Aib ipamorelin is the dominant impurity peak.
cleavage sites
Predicted in vivo cleavage sites are the Aib-His bond (resistant due to Aib) and the D-Phe-Lys bond. LC-MS of degraded product shows Aib-His and D-Phe-Lys cleavage peaks as the dominant signals.
lyophilized stability
The lyophilized powder is stable for years refrigerated and months at room temperature. Hygroscopic; protect from moisture and light.
reconstituted stability
Bacteriostatic 0.9% benzyl-alcohol water at 2.5 mg/mL gives refrigerated stability of 2-4 weeks. Plain sterile water shortens stability to about 7 days at 2-8 C. Degradation signals are turbidity, yellowing, and particulate formation.
where this has been studied
PK and structural characterization from the originator's program.