What Are Peptides?
Peptides are short chains of two or more amino acids — essentially protein fragments. Collagen, elastin, and keratin are all proteins, and when they break down, their fragments (peptides) send signals to skin cells to produce more. Synthetic skincare peptides mimic or amplify these signaling pathways, stimulating collagen synthesis, tissue repair, and — in some cases — relaxing expression muscles.
Unlike retinol or AHAs that cause surface-level changes quickly, peptides work by stimulating cellular production pathways from the inside. This makes them low-irritation and suitable for long-term use, including on sensitive skin.
The Four Main Peptide Types
1. Signal Peptides
Send messages to fibroblasts to ramp up collagen, elastin, and matrix protein production.
2. Carrier Peptides
Deliver trace elements or active compounds deeper into the skin.
3. Neurotransmitter-Inhibiting Peptides (Neuropeptides)
Interfere with acetylcholine release or SNAP-25 protein function to temporarily reduce muscle contraction intensity. Marketed as “topical Botox” alternatives.
4. Enzyme-Inhibiting Peptides
Block enzymes that break down collagen (MMPs) or stimulate melanin production (tyrosinase).
- Trylagen (Acetyl Tetrapeptide-11): Inhibits trypsin-like enzymes to prevent collagen degradation.
- SNAP-8: Similar mechanism to argireline, used as a complementary addition.
Peptides vs Retinol — How They Compare
| Feature | Peptides | Retinol |
|---|---|---|
| How it works | Cellular signaling, stimulates collagen production | Converts to retinoic acid, regulates gene expression |
| Irritation | Low | Initial dryness, flaking, sensitivity |
| Clinical evidence | Established for some; generally less than retinol | Strong (prescription retinoic acid available) |
| Sun sensitivity | None | Photosensitizing (nighttime use preferred) |
| Best for | Sensitive skin, pre- and post-retinol routines | Photoaging, acne-prone skin |
Peptides and retinol are complementary, not competing. Retinol strongly upregulates collagen genes; peptides support that synthesis process through cellular signaling.
How to Use Peptides Effectively
pH consideration: Peptide activity can be reduced in low-pH environments. If you use AHAs or BHAs, apply them in a separate step and let the skin return to its natural pH before applying peptide serums — or separate them by time of day.
Application order: Cleanse → Toner → Peptide serum → Moisturizer. If using retinol, keep it in a separate step rather than layering peptides directly over it.
Timeline: Peptides build results over time, not overnight. Allow at least 8–12 weeks of consistent use before evaluating results.
Frequently Asked Questions
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