Oxytocin 10mg Peptides
Exacting research starts with uncompromising materials.
Peptide Scientific Labs Oxytocin is a lyophilized peptide vial engineered for laboratory workflows requiring precision, reliability, and clear documentation. This neuropeptide is supplied in a stable powder format for controlled reconstitution and method development, with a total strength of 10mg per vial to support repeatable bench performance across assays and analyses.
- Each vial contains 10mg of Oxytocin, suitable for receptor-binding characterization, signaling pathway exploration, and analytical method validation in controlled research environments.
Prepared as a fine, lyophilized solid, this peptide is formulated for clean reconstitution according to laboratory protocols. The format supports accurate aliquoting, consistent handling, and compatibility with common peptide workflows. Researchers can expect a dependable material profile designed to minimize variability and streamline setup for in vitro and ex vivo experimentation where consistency matters.
Every lot is produced with a disciplined focus on quality. Identity and purity are assessed using HPLC and mass spectrometry, with lot-specific documentation available to support method traceability and record-keeping. Small-batch manufacturing and controlled handling help protect integrity from production through fulfillment, promoting reproducible outcomes across repeated runs and longitudinal studies.
Why Peptide Scientific Labs: Our USA-based operation emphasizes rigorous standards, transparent data, and disciplined processes. From careful material selection to clean packaging practices, our objective is straightforward—deliver research-grade peptides that meet expectations for purity and consistency without compromise.
Research-use only: This material is furnished exclusively for laboratory research and development. Not a drug, food, or cosmetic. Not for human or veterinary use. Handle using appropriate laboratory precautions and follow institutional guidelines for storage, reconstitution, and disposal.
With clear specifications, reliable performance, and a quality-first approach, Peptide Scientific Labs Oxytocin provides a dependable foundation for modern peptide research.
- Most orders ship within 24 hours and arrive within 3 to 5 days of leaving our warehouse.
- Shipping is free on orders of $99+ (except Hawaii and Alaska).
- All orders ship in discreet packaging via USPS Ground Advantage mail.
Delivery restrictions vary by state.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is Oxytocin typically studied for?
Oxytocin is commonly studied in neurobehavioral research involving social bonding, trust, stress response, and maternal behavior, as well as in reproductive physiology models. The safe wording is to explain these established research areas without implying that a research product is a consumer-use intervention.
What is Oxytocin?
Oxytocin is a naturally occurring nonapeptide hormone and neuropeptide. It is well known for roles in social behavior, bonding, lactation, and reproductive physiology, which makes it broader than many niche research peptides. On a product page, it should still be described as a research compound intended for laboratory investigation only.
What are neuropeptides?
Neuropeptides are short chains of amino acids produced primarily by neurons and used as signaling molecules within the nervous system. Unlike classical neurotransmitters, which are small molecules stored in synaptic vesicles, neuropeptides are synthesized as larger precursor proteins and then enzymatically processed into their active short-chain form before being released.
Examples of widely studied neuropeptides include oxytocin, vasopressin, substance P, and neuropeptide Y. They are investigated in connection with mood, stress response, memory, pain signaling, social behavior, and a wide range of other neurobiological processes in research models.
How do neuropeptides differ from classical neurotransmitters?
Classical neurotransmitters such as glutamate, GABA, dopamine, and acetylcholine are small, non-peptide molecules. They are typically synthesized directly in the presynaptic terminal, stored in small clear vesicles, and released for fast point-to-point signaling across the synaptic cleft. Their action is usually short-lived and terminated by reuptake or rapid enzymatic breakdown.
Neuropeptides, by contrast, are larger, are produced from longer precursor proteins in the cell body, and are stored in dense-core vesicles. They are generally released under higher-frequency stimulation and tend to produce slower, longer-lasting, and more modulatory effects — often operating over larger spatial distances within the nervous system.
Where are neuropeptides produced in the body?
Neuropeptides are produced primarily in neurons of the central and peripheral nervous system, but they are also found in many non-neuronal tissues. Major sites of production include the hypothalamus, pituitary gland, gut enteric nervous system, adrenal medulla, and various endocrine cells throughout the gastrointestinal tract.
This broad distribution is one reason neuropeptides are such a large research area — many of them act at the intersection of nervous, endocrine, and immune signaling. Peptide Scientific Labs supplies synthetic neuropeptide reference compounds for in vitro laboratory use only.