Handling

Storing peptides safely

A peptide is a chain of amino acids, and like anything biological it breaks down over time — faster when it is warm, wet, or in bright light. Good storage is mostly about keeping it cold and dark. Here is what changes at each stage, and how to tell when something has gone wrong.

Two states, two rules

A peptide has two very different lifespans depending on whether it is still dry or has been mixed. Almost every storage question comes down to knowing which state you're dealing with:

  • Lyophilized (dry powder) — very stable. Measured in months to years.
  • Reconstituted (mixed with water) — much less stable. Measured in weeks.

Mixing starts the clock. Until then, the freeze-dried powder is happy to wait.

Dry (lyophilized) storage

An unopened, freeze-dried vial is the easy case. Kept cold and dark it stays good for a long time.

  • Short term (weeks): a refrigerator is fine.
  • Long term (months to years): a freezer. The colder it is, the slower it degrades.
  • In transit: most lyophilized peptides tolerate a few days at room temperature without meaningful loss, which is why they can ship without ice. That tolerance is short — get them cold on arrival.
Why freezing is safe here

Freezing damage comes from ice crystals forming in liquid. A freeze-dried powder has almost no water in it, so there is nothing to form crystals. That is exactly why it is dried in the first place.

Mixed (reconstituted) storage

Once you add bacteriostatic water, the peptide is in solution and far more fragile. From this point:

  • Keep it in the refrigerator at all times — roughly 2–8 °C (36–46 °F).
  • Use it within a few weeks. A common working window is around three to four weeks, though it varies by peptide.
  • Do not re-freeze a mixed vial unless you know that specific peptide tolerates it. Freezing and thawing a liquid forms ice crystals that can shear the peptide apart.
  • Keep it upright and undisturbed. Minimise shaking every time you handle it, for the same reason you didn't shake it while mixing.

Temperature at a glance

StateWhereRough temperatureKeeps for
Lyophilized, long termFreezer−20 °C (−4 °F) or colderMonths to years
Lyophilized, short termFridge2–8 °C (36–46 °F)Weeks to months
Lyophilized, in transitRoom tempUp to ~25 °C (77 °F)A few days
ReconstitutedFridge2–8 °C (36–46 °F)~3–4 weeks

Treat these as general ranges, not guarantees. The supplier's guidance for a specific peptide always wins over a rule of thumb.

Light and air

Two more things degrade peptides quietly, on top of heat:

  • Light — especially direct sun and UV. Store vials in their box or a drawer, not on a windowsill. A fridge is already dark, which helps.
  • Air and repeated needle punctures — every time you push a needle through the rubber top, a little air and a chance of contamination goes in. Use clean technique and don't puncture the top more than you need to.

Travel

The safest way to move a peptide is dry. If you can travel before reconstituting, do — a lyophilized vial handles a day or two at room temperature far better than a mixed one.

  • Short trips: an insulated pouch with a small ice pack keeps a mixed vial in range. Don't let the vial sit directly against the ice pack, which can freeze it.
  • Longer trips: carry it dry and mix it at your destination.
  • Never leave a vial in a hot car. Interior temperatures climb fast and will cook it.

What degradation looks like

A healthy reconstituted vial is clear and colourless, like water. Warning signs that a peptide has broken down or been contaminated:

  • Cloudiness or haze that doesn't clear when swirled.
  • Floating particles, flecks, or strands in the liquid.
  • A colour change — yellowing or darkening.
  • Anything settled at the bottom after it was fully dissolved.
When in doubt, discard

If a vial looks off, don't use it. Degraded or contaminated material isn't worth the risk, and no amount of swirling fixes a peptide that has already broken down.

Common mistakes

  • Leaving a mixed vial on the counter. Room temperature ages it quickly — it belongs in the fridge.
  • Freezing a reconstituted vial by accident, e.g. against a freezer wall or an ice pack. Ice crystals damage the peptide.
  • Storing on a windowsill or shelf in the light. Keep it dark.
  • Assuming every peptide behaves the same. Shelf life and freeze tolerance vary — check the specific product.
  • Using a vial that looks cloudy. Clear means good; cloudy means stop.

This storage guide is educational and for laboratory research use only. It is not medical advice.