MOD-GRF (1-29)

Compounded / Research Use Growth Hormone / Anti-Aging

A stabilized GHRH fragment with 4 amino acid substitutions — the preferred 'clean' pulsatile GH secretagogue.

Also Known As
Modified GRF 1-29, CJC-1295 without DAC, Tetrasubstituted GRF (1-29)
Status
Compounded / Research Use
Category
Growth Hormone / Anti-Aging
Route
Subcutaneous injection

What Is MOD-GRF (1-29)?

MOD-GRF (1-29), also known as CJC-1295 without DAC or tetrasubstituted GRF (1-29), is a synthetic analog of the first 29 amino acids of GHRH with four amino acid substitutions at positions 2 (D-Ala), 8 (Gln), 15 (Ala), and 27 (Leu). These modifications protect the peptide from enzymatic degradation, extending its half-life from ~7 minutes (native GHRH 1-29) to approximately 30 minutes.

The 30-minute half-life is intentionally short compared to CJC-1295 with DAC (6-8 days). This shorter duration produces physiologically natural GH pulses rather than the sustained GH elevation caused by DAC-conjugated versions. Many clinicians prefer MOD-GRF specifically because it mimics the body's natural pulsatile GH secretion pattern.

MOD-GRF is almost always combined with a GHRP (typically ipamorelin) for synergistic GH release. The GHRH analog amplifies the magnitude of the GH pulse while the GHRP triggers the release timing — together producing a robust, physiological GH pulse.

What The Research Says

Research demonstrates the four amino acid substitutions increase potency and stability while maintaining the same receptor binding and GH stimulation as native GHRH (1-29). Combined with ipamorelin, MOD-GRF produces synergistic GH release approximately 3-5x greater than either agent alone.

The pulsatile GH release pattern produced by MOD-GRF is associated with better receptor sensitivity maintenance versus continuous GH elevation. This may reduce the risk of desensitization seen with longer-acting agents.

📚 Key Reference: PMID: 16882916 (GRF analog studies)

Common Uses

Important Safety Information

Well-tolerated. Injection site reactions, headache, flushing may occur. IGF-1 monitoring is essential. Avoid in active malignancy. Consult your provider.

Questions To Ask Your Provider

  1. Why MOD-GRF over CJC-1295 with DAC?
  2. What is the dosing timing relative to sleep?
  3. What are my baseline IGF-1 levels?
  4. Is ipamorelin included in the protocol?

Regulatory Status

NOT FDA-approved. Available through compounding pharmacies. WADA prohibited.

Find a Provider Who Offers MOD-GRF (1-29)

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Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only. PepKey does not diagnose, prescribe, or recommend dosages. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting any peptide therapy. Full disclosure
Last updated: 2026-04-08 · ← Back to Peptide Library