Peptides sit in a sweet spot between small molecules and biologics: they can be engineered for high specificity, tuned with chemical modifications, and explored rapidly through libraries. But peptide screening is not “just HTS with different molecules.” It blends chemistry (library design and synthesis), biology (assay selection and target context), and analytics (MS-based confirmation, binding kinetics, stability, and sometimes regulated bioanalysis). That is why many teams partner with a Contract Research Organization (CRO) for Peptide Screening—to industrialize the workflow from idea → hits → optimized leads, while keeping data quality, reproducibility, and documentation strong. Below is a knowledge-focused overview of what peptide-screening CROs typically do, the major screening technologies, the deliverables you should expect, and the technical “gotchas” that often decide whether a campaign succeeds. 1) What a “CRO for Peptide Screening” actually provides (beyond bench capacity) A peptide-screening CRO usually covers some combination of these pillars: Library strategy + synthesis execution Peptide discovery begins with what you choose to search. Many CROs help design libraries for the biological question (agonist vs antagonist, surface binder vs enzyme substrate, linear vs cyclic peptides, inclusion of non-natural amino acids, etc.), then manufacture the library and track identities and…