Antimicrobial Peptides from Peptide Scientific Labs offer research-grade purity and consistency for peptide antibiotics and bactericidal studies. Our synthetic peptides undergo rigorous testing and comply with strict laboratory standards.
LL-37 is tricky to source but PSL nailed it. Clean product, proper documentation, and actually responsive customer support when I had questions about storage recommendations 🔬 Our host-defense signaling data has been reproducible across three independent runs now. Solid.
We study antimicrobial peptides and finding research-grade LL-37 at 5mg was exactly what we needed. Purity checked out on our end, biofilm interaction assays came back with expected MIC values. Packaging was professional and shipping was quick.
How do antimicrobial peptides differ from antibiotics?
Classical antibiotics are usually small-molecule compounds — many derived from microbial secondary metabolites — that act on specific bacterial targets such as cell wall synthesis, ribosomes, or DNA replication. Antimicrobial peptides, by contrast, are short amino acid chains produced as part of the innate immune response, and their primary research-studied mechanism typically involves direct interaction with microbial membranes rather than a single enzymatic target.
Because AMPs often act on membrane structure rather than one discrete protein, they have been of research interest in the context of membrane biophysics and resistance evolution. This makes them a distinct class of study from conventional antibiotics, even when the two are sometimes grouped together in broader antimicrobial research literature.
Where do antimicrobial peptides occur naturally?
Antimicrobial peptides are found across essentially every branch of life. In mammals, well-studied examples include cathelicidins (such as LL-37) and defensins, which are expressed in skin, mucosal surfaces, neutrophils, and epithelial tissues. In amphibians, insects, and plants, AMPs form a major part of innate immunity and are secreted in skin, hemolymph, seeds, and other tissues.
This broad distribution across kingdoms is one reason AMPs are a significant subject of biological research — they represent a conserved, ancient strategy for host defense. Peptide Scientific Labs supplies synthetic AMP reference compounds for in vitro research use only.
What are antimicrobial peptides?
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are short, naturally occurring chains of amino acids that act as part of the innate immune defense in virtually all living organisms — from bacteria and plants to insects, amphibians, and mammals. They are typically between 10 and 50 amino acids long and often carry a net positive charge, which allows them to interact with negatively charged microbial membranes.
In research, AMPs are studied as a broad and evolutionarily ancient class of host defense molecules. They are investigated in the context of innate immunity, membrane biology, structure–activity relationships, and microbial resistance. All AMPs offered by Peptide Scientific Labs are intended strictly for in vitro laboratory research and are not drugs, supplements, or therapeutics.
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All products are supplied in powder (lyophilized) form and must be reconstituted with an appropriate diluent for research use only. Research supplies (e.g., syringes, bacteriostatic water) are not included. No dosing guidance is provided. We comply with all applicable local and state laws governing Research-Only Chemical sales. We are not a pharmacy and do not promote or provide guidance for human or animal use.
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