What people often ask
Is MGF a form of IGF-1?
It's a splice variant of the same gene. The IGF-1 gene gets alternatively spliced into multiple isoforms. IGF-1Ea (the systemic liver form), Eb, and Ec. MGF is the IGF-1Ec splice variant, the one your muscles produce locally after mechanical loading.
How is it different from IGF-1 LR3 or IGF-DES?
Different molecule. LR3 and DES are modified forms of native IGF-1 (Ea splice variant) engineered for longer half-life or higher receptor potency. MGF is a different splice variant entirely, with a different C-terminal extension. The C-terminal "E peptide" of MGF appears to have unique satellite-cell-activating effects that the Ea splice variant doesn't share.
Should I use MGF or PEG-MGF?
Most modern research-peptide protocols use PEG-MGF because of the practical half-life issue. Native MGF is essentially limited to site-injection close to training. PEG-MGF's longer half-life supports broader dosing strategies. For most users, PEG-MGF is the more practical choice.
Why is the half-life so short?
Because MGF's natural endogenous role is local autocrine/paracrine signaling, released by muscle tissue, used right at that tissue. The body never needs MGF to circulate widely, so there's no biological reason for it to have a long half-life. The synthetic version inherits the same short clearance.
Is it FDA-approved?
No. Not approved for any indication. Not currently on the FDA Category 2 list.
Does the body produce its own MGF after training?
Yes. The whole reason researchers identified the IGF-1Ec splice variant is that its expression is upregulated in muscle after resistance training. So if you train hard enough, you're already producing your own MGF, exogenous synthetic MGF is layered on top of that natural response.
Will I test positive on a drug test?
Yes. MGF is on the WADA banned list. Competitive athletes will test positive.