Oral Peptides

Peptides with demonstrated or researched oral bioavailability — including GLP-1 agonists, secretagogues, bioregulators, and emerging oral formulations.

Oral Peptides

Most peptides are degraded by gastric acid and proteases, making oral delivery a major pharmacological challenge. This category covers peptides that have achieved meaningful oral bioavailability through inherent stability, formulation technology, or small-molecule mimicry.

Complete Peptide Directory

Clinically Validated Oral Peptides

PeptideDescriptionOral Technology
Semaglutide OralOral GLP-1 agonist FDA-approved as RybelsusSNAC absorption enhancer co-formulation; ~1% bioavailability
BPC-157Gastric pentadecapeptide with demonstrated oral activity in animal modelsGastric origin provides inherent acid stability; local GI activity
BPC-157 StableStabilized BPC-157 formulation optimized for oral administrationEnhanced resistance to proteolytic degradation

Oral Small-Molecule GLP-1 Agonists

PeptideDescriptionOral Technology
OrforglipronNon-peptide oral GLP-1R agonist in Phase 3 clinical trialsSmall molecule; bypasses peptide bioavailability challenges entirely
DanuglipronNon-peptide oral GLP-1R agonist from PfizerSmall molecule with twice-daily oral dosing

Oral Secretagogues & Metabolic Agents

PeptideDescriptionOral Technology
MK-677 (Ibutamoren)Non-peptide oral ghrelin receptor agonist for GH secretionSmall molecule; high oral bioavailability; long-acting
5-Amino-1MQNNMT inhibitor for fat metabolism and NAD+ modulationSmall molecule with demonstrated oral bioavailability
NAD+Essential coenzyme supplemented orally as NMN/NR precursorsPrecursor forms (NMN, NR) are orally active
AICARAMPK activator and exercise mimeticNucleoside analog with moderate oral absorption
GlutathioneTripeptide antioxidant with oral formulation researchLiposomal and S-acetyl formulations improve oral absorption
OctreotideSomatostatin analog with oral formulation in developmentTPGS absorption enhancer technology; octreotide oral capsules

Bioregulators with Reported Oral Activity

Khavinson bioregulators are short peptides (2-4 amino acids) reported to maintain activity when taken orally, potentially due to their small size allowing PepT1 transporter absorption.

PeptideSizeTarget Tissue
Vilon2 amino acids (Lys-Glu)Thymus / Immune system
Epithalon4 amino acidsPineal / Telomerase
Cartalax3 amino acidsCartilage / Skin
Cardiogen4 amino acidsHeart
Pinealon3 amino acidsBrain / Pineal
Cortagen4 amino acidsBrain cortex

Common Research Themes

The Oral Barrier: Peptides face three main obstacles to oral delivery: (1) gastric acid denaturation, (2) protease degradation in the gut lumen, and (3) poor absorption across the intestinal epithelium due to size and hydrophilicity. Solutions include absorption enhancers (SNAC), enteric coatings, protease inhibitors, and permeation enhancers.

Small Molecule Mimetics: MK-677 and Orforglipron represent the strategy of developing non-peptide small molecules that activate the same receptors as natural peptides. These bypass oral bioavailability challenges entirely since they are not peptides.

Short Peptide Advantage: Di- and tripeptides can be absorbed via the PepT1 transporter in the small intestine, which may explain the reported oral activity of Khavinson bioregulators. Larger peptides generally cannot use this pathway.

BPC-157 Oral Route: BPC-157 is notable as a peptide of gastric origin that has demonstrated biological activity when administered orally in animal studies, particularly for gastrointestinal conditions. This may relate to local activity in the GI tract rather than systemic absorption.

Getting Started

If you are new to this category, we recommend starting with BPC-157 — uniquely stable in gastric acid with demonstrated oral bioavailability in preclinical models. From there, explore related peptides through the See Also sections on each page to build a comprehensive understanding of the research landscape.

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