Fusion of thymosin alpha 1 with mutant IgG1 CH3 prolongs half-life and enhances antitumor effects in vivo.
Shen. Xutong X; Wang. Liping L; Xu. Caoying C; Yang. Jiahui J; Peng. Renhao R; Hu. Xinyi X; Wang. Fanwen F; Zheng. Heng H; Lao. Xingzhen X
Key Findings
- The Tα1âmCH3 fusion protein has a dramatically extended halfâlife (â47âŻh) compared with native Tα1 (â3âŻh).
- The fusion retains thymosinâalphaâ1âs immuneâboosting activity and even shows slightly stronger effects on Tâcell activation and cytokine production.
- In mouse tumor models, the longâacting version reduced tumor growth more effectively than regular Tα1, with higher CD4âș/CD8âș Tâcell infiltration.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY users, the main takeaway is that the short halfâlife of regular thymosinâalphaâ1 limits its practical use, and a longerâacting version could mean fewer injections and potentially stronger effects, but such a formulation isnât currently available for selfâadministration.
Summary
Scientists linked thymosinâalphaâ1 to a piece of an antibody to make it stay in the body much longer (about 47âŻhours vs 3âŻhours) and found it worked at least as well, maybe a bit better, at boosting immune cells and slowing tumor growth in mice.
Abstract
Thymosin alpha 1 (Tα1) is an immunomodulatory polypeptide secreted from the thymus. Tα1 has a wide range of biological functions, such as immunomodulation and endocrine regulation. Tα1 also displays antiviral and antitumor activities. Tα1 has been successfully used in clinical adjuvant therapy for solid tumors to improve the immune response of patients undergoing chemotherapy and radiotherapy. However, the half-life of Tα1 in the body is short, so frequent administration is required to maintain efficacy. In order to improve the pharmacokinetic profile of Tα1, we linked the mutated CH3 (mCH3) fragment of IgG1 (human) to the C-terminus of Tα1 to produce a long-acting fusion protein, Tα1-mCH3. The half-life of Tα1-mCH3 (47 h) was substantially increased compared with that of the parent molecule Tα1 (3 h). In vivo studies indicated that mCH3 fusion retained the original biological activity of Tα1, and Tα1-mCH3 showed slightly better immunomodulatory effect than Ta1. In the 4 T1 and B16F10 tumor xenograft models, Tα1-mCH3 induced a greater abundance of CD4<sup>+</sup> and CD8<sup>+</sup> T-cells in tumor tissues compared with Ta1. Tα1-mCH3 exhibited better effect in promoting the production of IL-2 and IFN-γ compared with Tα1. Therefore, Tα1-mCH3 more efficiently inhibited the growth of 4 T1 and B16F10 tumors than Tα1. In conclusion, fusion with mCH3 is an attractive strategy to lengthen the half-life and increase the activity of Tα1.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-06-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.intimp.2019.05.047
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