College Station is anchored by Texas A&M University, one of the largest research universities in the country with major programs in agricultural sciences, veterinary medicine, and health. Texas A&M AgriLife Research and the College of Veterinary Medicine make College Station a unique research hub for peptide-based in vitro work.
Texas A&M University's research enterprise spans agricultural biotechnology, veterinary medicine, health sciences, and basic biomedical research. The university's AgriLife Research program is one of the largest state agricultural research systems in the US, conducting work that frequently involves peptide-based bioassays.
Texas A&M Health brings an additional dimension of clinical and translational research to College Station. The Bush School and various interdisciplinary research institutes add further depth to the research community that requires high-purity in vitro compounds.
Texas A&M's veterinary medicine programs are among the strongest in the country, with active research in animal physiology, metabolic disease, and tissue repair — all areas where synthetic peptides serve as critical research tools for in vitro screening and mechanistic studies.
The tissue repair category is particularly relevant to veterinary and agricultural research. Metabolic research compounds are increasingly used in both veterinary and human health research programs at Texas A&M Health.
Every compound shipped to College Station includes a batch-specific Certificate of Analysis with HPLC purity data, mass spectrometry identity confirmation, and endotoxin testing results. All batch records are permanently accessible through our public COA library.
FOR RESEARCH USE ONLY. All compounds supplied by Lone Star Peptide Co. are intended exclusively for laboratory and in vitro research use by qualified scientists. Not intended for human or animal consumption, therapeutic use, or clinical application.