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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
2019 pubmed 4 citations

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 Tα1‑mCH3 fusion protein has a dramatically extended half‑life (≈47 h) compared with native Tα1 (≈3 h).
  • The fusion retains thymosin‑alpha‑1’s immune‑boosting activity and even shows slightly stronger effects on T‑cell activation and cytokine production.
  • In mouse tumor models, the long‑acting version reduced tumor growth more effectively than regular Tα1, with higher CD4âș/CD8âș T‑cell infiltration.

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY users, the main takeaway is that the short half‑life of regular thymosin‑alpha‑1 limits its practical use, and a longer‑acting version could mean fewer injections and potentially stronger effects, but such a formulation isn’t currently available for self‑administration.

Summary

Scientists linked thymosin‑alpha‑1 to a piece of an antibody to make it stay in the body much longer (about 47 hours vs 3 hours) 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 (T&#x3b1;1) is an immunomodulatory polypeptide secreted from the thymus. T&#x3b1;1 has a wide range of biological functions, such as immunomodulation and endocrine regulation. T&#x3b1;1 also displays antiviral and antitumor activities. T&#x3b1;1 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 T&#x3b1;1 in the body is short, so frequent administration is required to maintain efficacy. In order to improve the pharmacokinetic profile of T&#x3b1;1, we linked the mutated CH3 (mCH3) fragment of IgG1 (human) to the C-terminus of T&#x3b1;1 to produce a long-acting fusion protein, T&#x3b1;1-mCH3. The half-life of T&#x3b1;1-mCH3 (47&#x202f;h) was substantially increased compared with that of the parent molecule T&#x3b1;1 (3&#x202f;h). In vivo studies indicated that mCH3 fusion retained the original biological activity of T&#x3b1;1, and T&#x3b1;1-mCH3 showed slightly better immunomodulatory effect than Ta1. In the 4&#x202f;T1 and B16F10 tumor xenograft models, T&#x3b1;1-mCH3 induced a greater abundance of CD4<sup>+</sup> and CD8<sup>+</sup> T-cells in tumor tissues compared with Ta1. T&#x3b1;1-mCH3 exhibited better effect in promoting the production of IL-2 and IFN-&#x3b3; compared with T&#x3b1;1. Therefore, T&#x3b1;1-mCH3 more efficiently inhibited the growth of 4&#x202f;T1 and B16F10 tumors than T&#x3b1;1. In conclusion, fusion with mCH3 is an attractive strategy to lengthen the half-life and increase the activity of T&#x3b1;1.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-06-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.intimp.2019.05.047

Citations

4

References

39