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Thymogen

Glu-Trp, EW dipeptide, Oglufanide, L-Glutamyl-L-tryptophan

Quick Stats
Studies 94
Trials 51
Score 3
2024 pubmed 2 citations

The First Reciprocal Activities of Chiral Peptide Pharmaceuticals: Thymogen and Thymodepressin, as Examples.

Deigin. Vladislav V; Linkova. Natalia N; Vinogradova. Julia J; Vinogradov. Dmitrii D; Polyakova. Victoria V; Medvedev. Dmitrii D; Krasichkov. Alexander A; Volpina. Olga O

Key Findings

  • Thymogen (L‑Glu‑L‑Trp) acts as an immunostimulant.
  • Thymodepressin (D‑Glu‑D‑Trp) acts as an immunosuppressor.
  • Changing peptide chirality (L ↔ D) can reverse biological activity, suggesting a new way to design peptide drugs.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the take‑away is that peptide chirality matters: an L‑peptide may help boost immune defenses, while its D‑mirror could be explored for calming an overactive immune response. However, the review does not give dosing guidelines or safety data, so any experimentation should start with very low amounts, monitor reactions closely, and ideally wait for more detailed clinical studies before routine use.

Summary

The paper explains that the same two‑amino‑acid peptide can have opposite effects on the immune system depending on its handedness: the natural L‑form (Thymogen) boosts immunity, while the mirror‑image D‑form (Thymodepressin) dampens it. This shows that flipping a peptide’s chirality can switch it from a stimulant to a suppressor, opening the door to custom‑designed immune‑modulating peptides.

Abstract

Peptides show high promise in the targeting and intracellular delivery of next-generation biotherapeutics. The main limitation is peptides' susceptibility to proteolysis in biological systems. Numerous strategies have been developed to overcome this challenge by chemically enhancing the resistance to proteolysis. In nature, amino acids, except glycine, are found in L- and D-enantiomers. The change from one form to the other will change the primary structure of polypeptides and proteins and may affect their function and biological activity. Given the inherent chiral nature of biological systems and their high enantiomeric selectivity, there is rising interest in manipulating the chirality of polypeptides to enhance their biomolecular interactions. In this review, we discuss the first examples of up-and-down homeostasis regulation by two enantiomeric drugs: immunostimulant Thymogen (L-Glu-L-Trp) and immunosuppressor Thymodepressin (D-Glu(D-Trp)). This study shows the perspective of exploring chirality to remove the chiral wall between L- and D-biomolecules. The selected clinical result will be discussed.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-05-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/ijms25095042

Citations

2

References

107