Atlas of Peptide Origins · Volume I

Every peptide, traced from the lab where it was first synthesized to the researcher who uses it today.

Click any country to see what peptide work originated there. Pick a peptide to follow its journey across the globe — discovery, manufacturing, sourcing, clinical use — as kinetic arcs.

15
Peptides catalogued
11
Countries on the map
19
Attributed scientists
1921
Earliest origin
CATALOGUE · 15 ENTRIES

Peptide register

Select to trace journey

LegendOrigin · first synthesisPrecursor materialsManufacturingSourcing hubClinical research
DISCOVERY · 1921 → PRESENT

A century of peptide synthesis, one origin at a time.

Each marker is the first published synthesis of a catalogued peptide.

Full timeline →
FEATURED · CASE STUDY

BPC-157

Body Protection Compound · pentadecapeptide · MW 1419 Da

A 15-amino-acid sequence drawn from a fragment of body protection compound found in gastric juice. Characterized at the University of Zagreb by Predrag Sikiric's research group throughout the 1990s and 2000s. The entire BPC-157 literature traces back to this single Croatian insti

Open the BPC-157 entry
ORIGINS · BY COUNTRY

Five countries account for most peptide origins.

The first chemical synthesis of a peptide rarely happens twice. Each peptide has a single origin lab, and a handful of countries concentrate the discovery work — even as today's manufacturing chains route through different geography.

All catalogued countries →
EDITORIAL STANDARD
Origins

Peer-reviewed publication, Nobel records, or institutional historical archives. Multi-attributed where the literature splits.

Journey stops

Industry-typical roles at country granularity — never specific suppliers or batches.

Disclosure

The editorial team earns a referral fee on sourcing notes routed to revialife.com. Disclosed on every peptide panel.

FAQ

Common questions.

Where do the origin claims come from?
Every origin entry traces to peer-reviewed publication, Nobel records, or institutional historical archives. Where the literature splits across multiple institutions or years, each contributor is attributed separately. The methodology page lists the editorial standard in detail.
Why do so many peptides route through China and Korea on the journey arcs?
Because that's where most large-scale research-peptide manufacturing happens today. China's Hangzhou and Suzhou clusters and Korea's Anyang and Daejeon GMP facilities produce the bulk of research-grade peptide API shipped globally. The journey stops describe these industry-typical routes at country granularity — not specific suppliers or batches.
Is this atlas affiliated with a supplier?
The editorial team earns a referral fee when peptide-panel sourcing notes route a reader to revialife.com. The disclosure is on every peptide panel that carries such a note. The atlas itself is editorial — origins, contributors, journeys, and citations are independent of the commercial relationship.
EDITORIAL NOTE

Every peptide has a place of origin. Some were isolated from animal tissue a century ago. Some were designed by a team of medicinal chemists at a specific institution in a specific year. All of them now move through a manufacturing supply chain — typically routed through Switzerland, China, Korea, or India — before arriving at the lab where the research actually happens.

This atlas exists because most peptide reference material on the open web omits these origins entirely. The compound shows up in a catalog with a price and a purity figure, and the chain of discovery and manufacture behind it is invisible. Restoring the chain is editorial work — it doesn't change the chemistry, but it makes the chemistry legible.

THE DISPATCH

New entries to the atlas.

We add peptides, origins, and contributor records over time. Get notified when the atlas grows.

Peptide World

An open atlas of peptide origins. Every research peptide traced from its first synthesis through the modern supply chain that delivers it.

15 peptides · 11 countries · earliest origin 1921

Atlas
Editorial

Research Use Only. The compounds catalogued in this atlas are research reference standards. None are approved for human consumption by any major regulatory body. Nothing here is medical advice.

© 2026 Peptide World · Atlas Editorial