Semax · Stability & Shelf Life
Stability & Shelf Life
Research compounds degrade over time, and how fast depends on how they are stored. This reference covers what degrades Semax, and how its dry (lyophilized) stability window compares to its reconstituted window. It is laboratory reference guidance, not a use protocol. For research use only. Not for human consumption, diagnostic, or therapeutic use.
What degrades the compound
The main degradation drivers for Semax are heat, light, moisture, oxidation, and (once in solution) repeated freeze-thaw cycling. Each can alter the molecule in ways that change analytical readouts, which is why the documented storage condition is −20°C, desiccated, light-protected.
- Dry storage
- −20°C, desiccated, light-protected
- Primary stressors
- Heat · light · moisture · freeze-thaw
- Reconstituted
- Refrigerated, shorter window
Dry vs reconstituted stability
Lyophilized Semax stored cold, dry, and dark has the longest stability window. Once reconstituted, its window shortens substantially: a liquid solution is more exposed to the stressors above, so prepared material is typically refrigerated and used within a limited period.
This dry-versus-liquid difference is why labs reconstitute only what a study requires.
Best practice for integrity
To preserve integrity: minimize freeze-thaw by aliquoting before freezing, keep the material light-protected, and avoid warming the vial unnecessarily. Documenting preparation and storage dates makes any stability question traceable.
For research use only. Not for human consumption, diagnostic, or therapeutic use.
Available from Blueprint Labs
Semax
Third-party tested, Semax supplied as a research material with a certificate of analysis available.
Questions, answered
What is the shelf life of Semax?
Lyophilized Semax stored at −20°C, desiccated, light-protected has the longest window; reconstituted material is shorter-lived and refrigerated. Exact figures depend on storage and are documented per batch.
What degrades Semax fastest?
Heat, light, moisture, and repeated freeze-thaw cycles are the primary stressors.
Does reconstituting shorten the shelf life?
Yes. In solution Semax is more exposed to degradation and is used within a shorter, refrigerated window than the dry powder.
Is this stability data a use recommendation?
No. It is laboratory storage reference. For research use only. Not for human consumption, diagnostic, or therapeutic use.