Peptide Reconstitution Basics
How lyophilised research peptides are reconstituted — choosing a solvent, calculating concentration, and handling, in a laboratory context.
Reconstitution is the process of dissolving a freeze-dried (lyophilised) peptide powder back into a liquid so it can be measured and studied. It’s straightforward, but a few principles prevent wasted material.
Choosing a solvent
- Bacteriostatic water (water with 0.9% benzyl alcohol) is the most common choice in research settings because the preservative limits microbial growth in multi-use vials.
- Sterile or distilled water dissolves most peptides but offers no preservative.
- Some hydrophobic or poorly soluble sequences need a small amount of a milder co-solvent (e.g., dilute acetic acid) before being brought up to volume. The right solvent depends entirely on the peptide’s chemistry.
Adding the solvent gently
Direct a slow stream of solvent down the inside wall of the vial rather than blasting it onto the powder. Then let the vial sit and swirl gently — do not shake. Vigorous agitation introduces foam and shear stress that can denature or aggregate the peptide. Most peptides go into solution within a few minutes with gentle swirling.
Calculating concentration
Concentration is simply mass of peptide divided by volume of solvent. For example, a 5 mg peptide reconstituted in 2 mL of water gives:
5 mg ÷ 2 mL = 2.5 mg/mL
Choosing the reconstitution volume up front — based on how finely you need to measure — makes downstream calculations clean.
After reconstitution
- Refrigerate the solution at 2–8 °C.
- Inspect for clarity before each use; cloudiness or particulates suggest aggregation or contamination.
- Avoid repeated freeze–thaw cycles. If long-term storage is required, aliquot into single-use portions before freezing.
This guide describes laboratory handling only and is not instructions for human use. See our disclaimer.