DSIP 10mg Peptides

Build your study on a foundation of consistency with this precisely prepared DSIP research vial.

The Primavora Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide (DSIP) lyophilized peptide vial delivers a total of 10mg in a stable, freeze-dried format. As a neuropeptide, DSIP is presented for controlled laboratory work where dependable composition, traceability, and clear documentation support reproducible results.

  • Each vial contains 10mg of Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide (DSIP), a neuropeptide investigated for its roles in sleep-wake regulation, stress-response signaling, and hypothalamic-pituitary pathways.

This is a non-edible, laboratory-focused preparation engineered for reliable handling and method development. The lyophilized cake is produced for stability during storage and predictable behavior during reconstitution by qualified personnel using an appropriate sterile diluent of their choice. Researchers value DSIP’s profile for in vitro and ex vivo models, protocol optimization, and exploratory analyses where consistency across lots is essential.

Each vial is lot-traceable and packaged to protect against moisture and light. Our QC program emphasizes identity and purity verification using validated analytical methods, with third-party confirmation performed where applicable. A lot-specific Certificate of Analysis is available to document testing, traceability, and specifications. Packaging is designed for professional laboratory settings, enabling careful handling from receipt to storage.

Why Primavora – As a USA-based research supplier, Primavora prioritizes clarity, consistency, and compliance. We focus on clean presentation, rigorous standards, and transparent documentation so laboratories can work with confidence. Our peptides are produced under controlled conditions, with strict attention to handling, labeling, and record-keeping that reflects scientific discipline.

Recommended handling: Store in a cool, dry environment, protected from light and moisture. Reconstitute only in a controlled laboratory setting using appropriate aseptic technique. Follow institutional guidelines for use, storage, and disposal of research materials.

Ingredients: Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide (DSIP).

For laboratory research use only. Not for human consumption, medical, diagnostic, or veterinary use.

Total Strength
10mg
Strength Per vial
10mg/vial
Total Units
1 vial
Weight
0.70oz
Total DSIP Compounds
10mg
DSIP Compounds Per vial
10mg/vial

  • Most orders ship within 24 hours and arrive within 3 to 5 days of leaving our warehouse.
  • Shipping is free on orders of $99+ (except Hawaii and Alaska).
  • All orders ship in discreet packaging via USPS Ground Advantage mail.

Delivery restrictions vary by state.

Also Available In Research Kits

Customer Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to write a review!

Frequently Asked Questions

What is DSIP?

DSIP stands for Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide, a small experimental peptide long discussed in neuroendocrine literature. Its mechanism has never been completely settled, which is important to say plainly. The correct framing is that DSIP remains a research peptide of interest in sleep and stress-related models, not a settled clinical product.

What is DSIP typically studied for?

Researchers usually connect DSIP with sleep architecture, circadian regulation, stress response, and neuroendocrine signaling. Because the literature is mixed, strong claims should be avoided; the most accurate wording is that DSIP is studied in those areas, with ongoing uncertainty around its precise mechanism and reproducibility.

What are neuropeptides?

Neuropeptides are short chains of amino acids produced primarily by neurons and used as signaling molecules within the nervous system. Unlike classical neurotransmitters, which are small molecules stored in synaptic vesicles, neuropeptides are synthesized as larger precursor proteins and then enzymatically processed into their active short-chain form before being released.

Examples of widely studied neuropeptides include oxytocin, vasopressin, substance P, and neuropeptide Y. They are investigated in connection with mood, stress response, memory, pain signaling, social behavior, and a wide range of other neurobiological processes in research models.

How do neuropeptides differ from classical neurotransmitters?

Classical neurotransmitters such as glutamate, GABA, dopamine, and acetylcholine are small, non-peptide molecules. They are typically synthesized directly in the presynaptic terminal, stored in small clear vesicles, and released for fast point-to-point signaling across the synaptic cleft. Their action is usually short-lived and terminated by reuptake or rapid enzymatic breakdown.

Neuropeptides, by contrast, are larger, are produced from longer precursor proteins in the cell body, and are stored in dense-core vesicles. They are generally released under higher-frequency stimulation and tend to produce slower, longer-lasting, and more modulatory effects — often operating over larger spatial distances within the nervous system.

Where are neuropeptides produced in the body?

Neuropeptides are produced primarily in neurons of the central and peripheral nervous system, but they are also found in many non-neuronal tissues. Major sites of production include the hypothalamus, pituitary gland, gut enteric nervous system, adrenal medulla, and various endocrine cells throughout the gastrointestinal tract.

This broad distribution is one reason neuropeptides are such a large research area — many of them act at the intersection of nervous, endocrine, and immune signaling. Prima Vora supplies synthetic neuropeptide reference compounds for in vitro laboratory use only.

Recently Viewed