Quick Comparison
| Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu) | Licorice Root Extract | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Concentration | Concentrations: 0.1-1% in skincare products. Apply once or twice daily. Do NOT use with strong acids (vitamin C at low pH, AHAs) — copper can catalyze free radical formation with ascorbic acid. Best used as a standalone PM treatment or mixed with peptide serums. | Concentrations vary; glabridin at 0.1-0.4% is the most active brightening component. Full extract at 1-4%. Apply morning and/or night. Safe for all skin types. Often combined with niacinamide and arbutin for enhanced brightening. |
| Application | Topical (serum, cream). Blue/copper-colored products. Do not combine with low-pH vitamin C. | Topical (serum, cream, toner). Very stable in formulation. Compatible with most active ingredients. |
| Research Papers | 10 papers | 10 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu)
GHK-Cu activates wound repair genes through copper-dependent transcription factor modulation. It stimulates fibroblasts to produce collagen types I, III, and V via COL1A1, COL3A1, COL5A1 upregulation, plus elastin, decorin, and glycosaminoglycans. Copper serves as cofactor for lysyl oxidase (collagen cross-linking). It attracts macrophages and mast cells releasing PDGF, TGF-beta, FGF. Promotes angiogenesis via VEGF. Uniquely activates MMP-2 and MMP-9 to break down damaged collagen and scar tissue — supporting healthy remodeling. Balanced anabolic-catabolic activity explains efficacy in anti-aging and scar revision. Avoid with vitamin C: copper catalyzes Fenton reactions oxidizing ascorbic acid.
Licorice Root Extract
Glabridin competitively inhibits tyrosinase by binding copper active site (CuA, CuB), blocking tyrosine to L-DOPA hydroxylation and DOPA to dopaquinone oxidation. Also inhibits tyrosinase-related protein 1 (TRP-1). Liquiritin disperses existing melanin via melanosome transfer inhibition and autophagy pathway upregulation in keratinocytes. Glycyrrhizin inhibits COX-2 and 5-lipoxygenase, reducing prostaglandin and leukotriene production. Multi-mechanism brightening: tyrosinase inhibition, melanin dispersal, anti-inflammation. Unlike hydroquinone, no melanocyte cytotoxicity — suitable for long-term use and all skin tones. Glabridin has free radical scavenging antioxidant activity. Glycyrrhizin's 11-beta-HSD inhibition has minimal systemic effect with topical use.
Risks & Safety
Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu)
Common
Blue/green tint to product (normal — copper color). Mild irritation.
Serious
Can be pro-oxidant when combined with vitamin C — avoid concurrent use.
Rare
Allergic reaction to copper.
Licorice Root Extract
Common
Very well-tolerated.
Serious
None documented topically. Oral licorice (glycyrrhizin) can elevate blood pressure, but topical use does not have this effect.
Rare
Allergic contact dermatitis.
Full Profiles
Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu) →
GHK-Cu is a naturally occurring copper complex that declines with age (60% reduction by age 60). It is one of the most potent wound-healing and skin-remodeling signals known — it stimulates collagen, elastin, glycosaminoglycan synthesis, and new blood vessel growth while simultaneously breaking down excess scar tissue. Used in both anti-aging and post-procedure recovery.
Licorice Root Extract →
A natural brightening and anti-inflammatory ingredient derived from Glycyrrhiza glabra root. The key actives — glabridin, liquiritin, and glycyrrhizin — inhibit melanin production, reduce inflammation, and soothe irritation. Licorice root is one of the most effective and gentle brightening ingredients available, with lower irritation risk than vitamin C or hydroquinone.