Thymosin α1: burying secrets in the thymus.
Moretti. Silvia S; Oikonomou. Vasileios V; Garaci. Enrico E; Romani. Luigina L
Key Findings
- Tα1 shapes dendritic cell signals to guide proper T‑cell responses
- Tα1 activates IDO1‑dependent pathways that support regulatory T‑cells and self‑tolerance
- AIRE and Tα1 regulate each other: AIRE helps make Tα1 and Tα1 increases AIRE expression
Practical Outcomes
- The main takeaway is that Tα1 may help maintain immune balance, but the paper provides no concrete guidance on how to use it for health or performance. For biohackers, it offers mechanistic backing for immune‑modulating claims, yet more applied research is needed before incorporating it into protocols.
Summary
Thymosin‑alpha‑1 is a protein made by cells in the thymus that helps immune cells communicate and keeps the immune system from attacking the body itself. The study shows it works together with a regulator called AIRE, each boosting the other's production, and it promotes cells that keep immune responses in check. However, the research is basic and doesn’t give any dosing or practical usage tips.
Abstract
Thymosin α1 (Tα1), an epithelial cell (EC)-derived cytokine, has the strong ability to modulate signals delivered through innate immune receptors on dendritic cells (DCs), thus instructing the initiation of appropriate immune responses to T cells. In its ability to activate indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1-dependent tolerogenic programs in DCs, Tα1 pivotally contributes to the maintenance of self-tolerance by regulating the function of regulatory T (Treg) cells. How Tα1 may contribute to the Treg cell ontogeny is not known. The transcriptional regulator autoimmune regulator (AIRE) is known to control central and peripheral tolerance. AIRE is highly expressed in thymic medullary ECs where it controls the ectopic expression of tissue restricted antigens for negative selection. The absence of AIRE-induced tissue-specific antigens in the thymus can lead to autoimmunity in the antigen-expressing target organ. Recently, AIRE protein has been detected in peripheral lymphoid organs, suggesting that peripheral AIRE may play a complementary role. We have addressed the possible relationship between AIRE and Tα1 and discovered an intricate crosstalk, whereby AIRE may promote prothymosin cleavage to Tα1, and Tα1 in turn transcriptionally regulates AIRE expression. Thus, similar to other members of thymic stromal poietins, Tα1 expressed within the thymus and peripheral tissues regulates the EC/DC crosstalk required for salutary immune homeostasis.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-06-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1517/14712598.2015.1044895
13
47