TB-500 in Australia: A Research Overview
What TB-500 is, why it is studied in laboratory research, and what to look for when sourcing it in Australia.
TB-500 is a synthetic peptide fragment studied in laboratory research. This overview is for Australian researchers evaluating it as a research compound. It does not discuss human use; Argon Peptides supplies TB-500 for in-vitro research only.
What is TB-500?
TB-500 is a synthetic peptide related to a naturally occurring protein fragment, examined in in-vitro and pre-clinical research models. As a research compound it is supplied as a lyophilised powder, reconstituted in the laboratory with bacteriostatic or sterile water before use.
Why TB-500 is studied
TB-500 is among the peptide fragments researchers use to investigate cellular processes in laboratory settings. As with any research compound, reproducible results depend on well-characterised, independently tested material — you need to know exactly what is in the vial.
Purity and COA
For TB-500, look for a published Certificate of Analysis from an independent third-party laboratory, with HPLC purity and ideally mass-spec (LC-MS) identity confirmation, available before you order.
- HPLC purity figure documented in a COA
- Mass-spec confirmation of molecular identity
- Independent third-party testing, not an in-house claim only
- A COA you can view before purchase
Sourcing TB-500 in Australia
Argon Peptides supplies TB-500 from within Australia, independently HPLC-tested, with its own Certificate of Analysis, for in-vitro research use only.
View the TB-500 research product, specifications, and COA.
View TB-500Frequently asked questions
- Is TB-500 available in Australia for research?
- Yes. Argon Peptides supplies TB-500 within Australia as a research-grade, lyophilised compound for in-vitro laboratory research only, with an independent HPLC Certificate of Analysis.
- How is TB-500 supplied and prepared?
- As a lyophilised powder, reconstituted in the laboratory with bacteriostatic or sterile water for research use.
Related reading
How to reconstitute peptides
A clear laboratory guide to reconstituting lyophilised research peptides — what you need, the steps, and storage.
HandlingHow to read a Certificate of Analysis
A short guide to what a Certificate of Analysis actually tells you — and what to check before you trust a vial.
Buying guideHow to choose a peptide supplier
The checklist serious researchers use to separate a credible research supplier from a storefront — COA transparency above all.
Last updated 2 June 2026. This article is general information for researchers, not medical or legal advice.
