DSIP Handling Guide: Common Mistakes to Avoid
Most handling advice for research peptides is written generically. The practices below are the ones that specifically matter for DSIP — including the mistakes it is unusually easy to make with this compound.
In plain English
Keep it dark at every stage, including while mixing. Keep solutions at or above neutral. And avoid storing mixed solution for months — the internal rearrangement is slow but it never stops.
What DSIP actually is
DSIP stands for Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide. It was isolated in the 1970s from the blood of animals in deep sleep — its name records how it was discovered, not a settled explanation of what it does. Decades on, researchers still have not agreed on its mechanism.
Supplied for laboratory research use only — not for human or animal use.
Third-party tested by HPLC and LC-MS, ≥99% purity, with a Certificate of Analysis on every order. Ships across Canada.
Technical detail below
Bench practices for DSIP
- Store and handle protected from light at all stages, including during reconstitution.
- Keep working solutions at or above neutral pH; acidification risks precipitation near the isoelectric point.
- Avoid prolonged storage of reconstituted material — the isomerisation route is slow but cumulative.
The chemistry behind these practices
- Tryptophan photo-oxidation — the characteristic route for this sequence, and the reason light protection is not optional here.
- Aspartate isomerisation and succinimide formation at the Asp-Ala motif, a well-known instability in peptides carrying Asp followed by a small residue.
- Precipitation if the solution drifts toward the acidic isoelectric point.
Storage summary
What DSIP is studied for
Investigated for effects on slow-wave sleep in the models that gave the peptide its name.
Studies have examined interactions with stress-axis signalling.
Explored in preclinical models of oxidative and stress-related neuronal injury.
Notably, decades of work have not converged on an accepted receptor or mechanism — a recurring theme in the literature.
Summarizes published preclinical literature. Provided for research reference only; not a claim of efficacy or a description of human use.
More DSIP reference
Lyophilized and reconstituted storage conditions, plus the practical working window.
Diluent selection, dissolution behaviour, and the calculator preset for this compound.
Which solvents work, why, and what abnormal dissolution behaviour indicates.
The specific chemical routes by which this molecule breaks down, and how to limit each.
Which assays are informative for this molecule, and what to actually check on its COA.
What to inspect on arrival, and which conditions actually warrant rejecting a vial.
Questions specific to this compound — structure, chemistry, and common misconceptions.
Lab Handling reference for other compounds
DSIP is supplied strictly as a research chemical for in-vitro laboratory and research use only. It is not intended for human or animal consumption, diagnostic, or therapeutic use. This page is educational laboratory-handling reference information — not medical advice, not usage guidance, and not a protocol.