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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 3
2007 pubmed 18 citations

Immunopharmacology of thymosin alpha1 and cytokine synergy.

Naylor. Paul H PH; Quadrini. Karen K; Garaci. Enrico E; Rasi. Guido G; Hadden. John W JW

Key Findings

  • Thymosin alpha‑1 enhances cellular immunity, particularly in immunosuppressed conditions
  • It can act through pathways shared with cytokines, leading to synergistic effects
  • Combining thymosin alpha‑1 with a cytokine blend (IRX‑2) improved survival in a mouse lung cancer model

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, thymosin alpha‑1 may be worth considering as an immune‑support supplement, especially alongside other cytokine‑based products, but current evidence is limited to animal studies. Until human trials confirm safety and effective doses, any protocol should be approached cautiously and preferably under medical guidance.

Summary

Thymosin alpha‑1 is a tiny protein that can boost the body's cellular immune response, especially when the immune system is weakened by things like chemotherapy, radiation, cancer, or aging. In mouse studies it worked better when combined with a mix of cytokines, improving survival of tumor‑bearing mice more than the cytokines alone. This suggests that pairing thymosin alpha‑1 with other immune‑activating agents might help restore immune function in stressed or older bodies, but human data and exact dosing are still lacking.

Abstract

Thymosin alpha1 (Talpha1) is a 28 amino acid biologically active protein cleaved from positions 2-29 of a precursor protein, prothymosin alpha. Since its discovery, Talpha1 has been administered to animals and humans in a wide variety of settings and its pharmacologic effects are to enhance cellular immunity. Talpha1 administration is highly effective in settings where irradiation, chemotherapy, tumor burden, or immune senescence have caused a reduction of T cell number and/or function. Recent in vitro studies, including the one reported here, suggest that Talpha1 may act via pathways commonly used by various cytokines. This raises the possibility that Talpha1 and cytokines may have synergistic activity through potentiation of cytokine activity by Talpha1. Improved control of tumor growth when tumor-bearing mice were treated with Talpha1 and high doses of IL-2 has been previously reported. We extended those studies with the Lewis lung carcinoma mouse model using IRX-2, a natural well-defined biologic containing multiple cytokines, in combination with Talpha1 (IRX-3). Although IRX-2 was effective alone (using doses that contain significantly less IL-2 than in most typical studies), adding Talpha1 led to significant improvement in survival of the tumor-bearing mice. Based on these observations, the immunopharmacology of Talpha1 predicts an important clinical role for Talpha1 in the restoration of cellular immune activity when used in combination with cytokines. Patients who experience immune suppression due to the presence of tumor, irradiation, and/or chemotherapy or aging of the host would most benefit from this treatment combination.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

Date

2007-06-13T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1196/annals.1415.036

Citations

18

References

29