Your Body
Where peptides are made and how they communicate with your cells
Your Body's Peptide Factory
Your body produces hundreds of different peptides that regulate everything from hunger and mood to immune response and blood pressure. Click on different areas to discover what peptides are made where.
How Peptides Talk to Cells
Peptides don't enter cells directly. Instead, they act like a key fitting into a lock -- binding to specific receptors on the cell surface to trigger a cascade of signals inside the cell. One peptide molecule can amplify into thousands of downstream effects.
Peptides You Already Know
You encounter peptides every day without realizing it. Here are some of the most important ones your body produces naturally -- and what happens when their levels are disrupted.
Insulin
51 amino acids
Made by the pancreas. Controls blood sugar by telling cells to absorb glucose. Disruption causes diabetes.
Oxytocin
9 amino acids
Made by the hypothalamus. Involved in bonding, trust, and childbirth. Often called the "love hormone."
Endorphins
16-31 amino acids
Made by the pituitary gland. Natural painkillers that produce the "runner's high." Bind to opioid receptors.
GLP-1
30 amino acids
Made by the gut after eating. Signals fullness and regulates blood sugar. Basis for Ozempic and Wegovy.
Melatonin
derived from tryptophan
Made by the pineal gland in darkness. Regulates your sleep-wake cycle. Disrupted by blue light exposure.
Angiotensin
8 amino acids
Made by the liver/kidneys. Controls blood pressure by constricting blood vessels. ACE inhibitors target this pathway.
Three Families of Peptides
Not all peptides do the same job. Your body uses three major families of peptides, each with distinct roles in keeping you alive and healthy.
Knowledge Check
Test what you learned in this module.
Practice Exercises
Reinforce your understanding with interactive exercises.