Cortagen Research Hub — Cortex-Derived Peptide Bioregulator Studies
Cortagen is a short cortex-derived peptide bioregulator (Ala-Glu-Asp-Pro) widely cited in Russian-language neurorestorative and ageing-research literature.
What this hub covers
- Tetrapeptide bioregulator structure (Ala-Glu-Asp-Pro)
- Khavinson peptide-bioregulator framework
- Neurorestorative research literature
- Comparison to other short peptide bioregulators
Cortagen research articles
All research →Cortagen Research Overview
Cortagen (Ala-Glu-Asp-Pro; AEDP) is a synthetic bioregulatory tetrapeptide derived from the cerebral cortex — the brain-targeted counterpart to the pineal-derived Pinealon and Epithalon — studied for neuroprotection, cognitive function restoration in aging models, retinal cell protection, neuronal gene expression modulation, and antioxidant defence in CNS tissue research.
Read article →Related research hubs
Researchers studying Cortagen commonly cross-reference these compounds.
Epithalon (also Epitalon or Epithalone) is a synthetic tetrapeptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) developed from research on the pineal peptide Epithalamin. It is widely cited in telomerase-activity and longevity research.
Explore hub →Thymalin is a polypeptide fraction of thymic origin widely cited in immunological and ageing-research models. This hub compiles Thymalin reference material and the broader thymic-peptide literature.
Explore hub →Cortagen research FAQ
- What is Cortagen?
- Cortagen is a short cortex-derived tetrapeptide bioregulator developed under the Khavinson peptide-bioregulator framework and widely cited in Russian-language neurorestorative research literature.
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