ORAL DELIVERY SCIENCE
Most claims about oral BPC-157 stability outpace the preclinical evidence; here is what simulated gastric fluid studies actually demonstrate. The question of oral BPC-157 stability in the acidic environment of the stomach has become one of the more debated topics in peptide delivery science — and, unfortunately, one of the most frequently misrepresented. This review synthesises available in vitro data, contextualises it against the broader peptide stability literature, and examines where formulation strategy — specifically enteric encapsulation — intersects with the degradation kinetics observed in simulated gastric fluid (SGF) and simulated intestinal fluid (SIF) models. Researchers sourcing BPC-157 oral capsules for preclinical protocols should understand both what this data confirms and, critically, what it cannot yet tell us.
BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound-157) is a synthetic pentadecapeptide of sequence Gly-Glu-Pro-Pro-Pro-Gly-Lys-Pro-Ala-Asp-Asp-Ala-Gly-Leu-Val (MW ≈ 1,419 Da) derived from a gastric juice protein fraction originally characterised by Sikiric and colleagues in the 1990s. Its stability profile in biological and simulated biological fluids has since become a meaningful consideration as researchers shift from subcutaneous injection paradigms toward oral capsule administration routes.
The rationale for oral delivery is compelling from a laboratory logistics perspective: reduced handling complexity, more consistent dosing intervals, and the potential to study enteric-systemic distribution in rodent models without repeated injection stress confounders. Yet this convenience brings a non-trivial chemical challenge — the gastrointestinal lumen is an extraordinarily hostile environment for unprotected peptides. Proteolytic enzymes, extreme pH variability, and mucosal barriers collectively degrade most peptide structures before meaningful absorption can occur.
This article examines the degradation kinetics of BPC-157 across physiologically relevant pH conditions, places those findings alongside data from comparable research peptides, and evaluates how enteric coating formulation modifies survival rates in standardised dissolution models. For context on why oral administration of peptides presents unique challenges relative to parenteral routes, see our earlier overview of oral vs injectable peptide bioavailability.
Simulated gastric fluid, as defined by USP monographs and the European Pharmacopoeia, is prepared by dissolving pepsin (3.2 mg/mL) in 0.1 N HCl to achieve a pH of approximately 1.2. Some contemporary research protocols employ fasted-state simulated gastric fluid (FaSSGF) at pH 1.6–2.0, which more accurately reflects inter-individual and interspecies variation in gastric acid secretion. The presence of pepsin is critical: this aspartyl protease exhibits peak activity between pH 1.5 and 2.5, cleaving peptide bonds preferentially at aromatic and hydrophobic residue pairs.
For peptide stability assays, the standard protocol involves incubating the test compound at 37°C in SGF under continuous gentle agitation. Aliquots are withdrawn at defined time intervals (typically 0, 5, 15, 30, 60, and 120 minutes) and immediately quenched with sodium hydroxide to halt proteolysis. Remaining intact peptide is then quantified by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) with UV detection at 220 nm, with degradation fragments identified by LC-MS/MS where resolution of mechanisms is required (Hamman et al., 2005; Patel et al., 2014).
Simulated intestinal fluid is prepared at pH 6.8 with pancreatin (containing trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase, and multiple peptidases) to represent the duodenal and jejunal luminal environment. Fasted-state SIF (FaSSIF) more closely approximates physiological bile salt and lecithin concentrations. The enzymatic milieu of SIF is, in many respects, more complex than SGF: the combined action of endo- and exopeptidases can cleave substrates that survive gastric passage largely intact.
BPC-157’s structure contains several features relevant to its stability profile. The three consecutive proline residues (Pro-Pro-Pro at positions 4–6) confer significant steric rigidity: prolyl peptide bonds are notoriously resistant to many endopeptidases due to the cyclic pyrrolidine side chain that limits enzymatic access. This proline-rich segment has been hypothesised to be the primary structural contributor to BPC-157’s relative acid stability compared with linear peptides of similar molecular weight (Sikiric et al., 2023). Additionally, the absence of large aromatic residues that pepsin preferentially cleaves may further attenuate gastric degradation.
For researchers seeking to understand how these properties compare with other formulation considerations, our oral capsule delivery guide provides foundational context on formulation strategies for research peptides.
In vitro stability data across published and reported preclinical models suggest BPC-157 exhibits substantially greater acid stability than most research peptides of comparable size. The following table summarises estimated half-life values derived from SGF, SIF, and physiological pH conditions based on reported dissolution and degradation studies:
| Fluid Condition | pH | Enzyme Environment | Estimated t½ (unprotected) | Estimated t½ (enteric capsule) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SGF (USP, fasted) | 1.2 | Pepsin 3.2 mg/mL | 18–32 min | >120 min (capsule intact) |
| FaSSGF (physiological) | 1.6–2.0 | Pepsin + lipase traces | 28–55 min | >120 min (capsule intact) |
| SIF (USP, fasted) | 6.8 | Pancreatin 10 mg/mL | 45–90 min | 60–120 min (post-dissolution) |
| Physiological plasma (pH 7.4) | 7.4 | Serum proteases | 2–6 hours | N/A (systemic) |
Note: Values represent ranges synthesised from published preclinical dissolution literature and in-house formulation testing benchmarks. Individual results vary with enzyme lot, temperature, agitation rate, and compound concentration. These data are for research context only.
To contextualise BPC-157’s acid stability, it is instructive to compare its SGF degradation kinetics against structurally distinct research peptides commonly studied in adjacent preclinical contexts. The following table presents comparative degradation rate constants (kd) and estimated half-lives in standard SGF (pH 1.2, 37°C):
| Peptide | Molecular Weight (Da) | Key Structural Feature | Estimated SGF t½ (unprotected) | Relative Acid Stability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPC-157 | 1,419 | Pro-Pro-Pro motif, no bulky aromatics | 18–55 min | Moderate–High |
| TB-500 (Thymosin β4 fragment) | ~4,963 | Larger linear peptide, multiple pepsin sites | 5–15 min | Low |
| GLP-1 (7–36) amide | 3,298 | His-Aib substitution in analogs; native form labile | 8–20 min | Low–Moderate |
| Epithalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) | 390 | Tetrapeptide, small — limited pepsin cleavage sites | 60–120 min | High |
| Selank (Thr-Lys-Pro-Arg-Pro-Gly-Pro) | 863 | Heptapeptide; Pro-Gly-Pro C-terminus stabilising | 30–60 min | Moderate |
| CJC-1295 (GHRH analog) | ~3,367 | Modified GHRH; DAC conjugation provides some steric shielding | 10–25 min | Low–Moderate |
Note: Estimates derived from published dissolution modelling and comparative stability literature (Hamman et al., 2005; Patel et al., 2014; Sikiric et al., 2024). Direct head-to-head SGF data under identical conditions for all listed peptides in a single study is not available in published literature as of 2026. These figures represent modelled approximations for research context.
Researchers working with TB-500 oral capsules and GLP-1 oral capsules should note these relative stability differences when designing dosing and formulation protocols. The full range of available oral capsule research compounds is catalogued in the product catalogue.
The following table summarises dissolution testing outcomes comparing enteric-coated (EC) and non-enteric (gelatin or HPMC) capsule formulations of BPC-157 in a sequential two-stage SGF/SIF dissolution model, which simulates gastric transit followed by intestinal passage:
| Capsule Type | SGF Stage (0–120 min, pH 1.2) | Transition (pH shift to 6.8) | SIF Stage (30 min post-dissolution) | SIF Stage (90 min post-dissolution) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard gelatin (non-enteric) | Dissolves within 5–10 min; ~40–55% peptide recovered at 60 min | ~30–45% intact | ~18–30% intact | ~8–15% intact |
| HPMC (non-enteric) | Dissolves within 10–20 min; ~50–65% peptide recovered at 60 min | ~40–55% intact | ~22–35% intact | ~10–20% intact |
| Enteric-coated (pH 5.5 release) | Capsule intact; <2% peptide detectable in SGF at 120 min | Dissolution initiates at pH 5.5–6.0 | ~70–82% intact | ~45–65% intact |
| Enteric-coated (pH 7.0 release) | Capsule intact; <1% peptide detectable in SGF at 120 min | Dissolution initiates at pH 6.8–7.2 | ~75–88% intact | ~50–72% intact |
Note: Values represent modelled ranges from in vitro dissolution testing frameworks. Biohacker’s BPC-157 utilises enteric encapsulation formulated for pH 5.5+ release. In vivo peptide recovery from the intestinal lumen will differ from in vitro recovery due to mucosal barriers, efflux transport, and first-pass effects not captured in these models.