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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
2020 pubmed 21 citations

Thymosin α1 protects from CTLA-4 intestinal immunopathology.

Renga. Giorgia G; Bellet. Marina M MM; Pariano. Marilena M; Gargaro. Marco M; Stincardini. Claudia C; D'Onofrio. Fiorella F; Mosci. Paolo P; Brancorsini. Stefano S; Bartoli. Andrea A; Goldstein. Allan L AL; Garaci. Enrico E; Romani. Luigina L; Costantini. Claudio C

Key Findings

  • Thymosin‑alpha‑1 prevents checkpoint inhibitor‑induced colitis in mice.
  • Protection relies on activation of the IDO1‑dependent tolerogenic pathway in the gut.
  • The peptide shifts the CD8âș/Treg cell ratio in tumors, suggesting context‑specific immune modulation.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study hints that thymosin‑alpha‑1 might be useful for managing immune‑related side effects of powerful immunotherapies, but it’s still early‑stage animal work. No human dosing or safety data are available yet, so it’s not ready for self‑experimentation, though it underscores the peptide’s broader immune‑modulating potential.

Summary

Researchers found that the natural peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 can protect mice from gut inflammation caused by cancer drugs that block the CTLA‑4 checkpoint. It does this by turning on a tolerance pathway (IDO1) in the intestine and reshaping immune cell balances, without affecting the tumor itself.

Abstract

The advent of immune checkpoint inhibitors has represented a major boost in cancer therapy, but safety concerns are increasingly being recognized. Indeed, although beneficial at the tumor site, unlocking a safeguard mechanism of the immune response may trigger autoimmune-like effects at the periphery, thus making the safety of immune checkpoint inhibitors a research priority. Herein, we demonstrate that thymosin &#x3b1;1 (T&#x3b1;1), an endogenous peptide with immunomodulatory activities, can protect mice from intestinal toxicity in a murine model of immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced colitis. Specifically, T&#x3b1;1 efficiently prevented immune adverse pathology in the gut by promoting the indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) 1-dependent tolerogenic immune pathway. Notably, T&#x3b1;1 did not induce IDO1 in the tumor microenvironment, but rather modulated the infiltration of T-cell subsets by inverting the ratio between CD8<sup>+</sup> and Treg cells, an effect that may depend on T&#x3b1;1 ability to regulate the differentiation and chemokine expression profile of DCs. Thus, through distinct mechanisms that are contingent upon the context, T&#x3b1;1 represents a plausible candidate to improve the safety/efficacy profile of immune checkpoint inhibitors.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-08-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.26508/lsa.202000662

Citations

21

References

50