Melatonin is responsible for the nocturnal increase observed in serum and thymus of thymosin alpha1 and thymulin concentrations: observations in rats and humans.
Molinero. P P; Soutto. M M; Benot. S S; Hmadcha. A A; Guerrero. J M JM
Key Findings
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 and thymulin levels rise at night, matching melatonin’s peak
- Melatonin injections during the day increase these peptide levels in rats
- Disrupting melatonin (light exposure or pinealectomy) reduces peptide concentrations
Practical Outcomes
- Taking melatonin at night may naturally enhance thymic peptide production and support immune health. Biohackers could consider timed melatonin supplementation to align with its nocturnal rise, but more human data are needed to define optimal doses.
Summary
The study shows that melatonin naturally spikes at night and boosts the production of immune‑supporting peptides thymosin‑alpha‑1 and thymulin in both rats and humans. Giving melatonin during the day also raises these peptide levels, while disrupting melatonin (continuous light or removing the pineal gland) lowers them, suggesting melatonin helps regulate immune function.
Abstract
This paper shows that melatonin regulates both thymosin alpha1 and thymulin production as well as the expression of the prothymosin alpha gene. The results revealed the following facts: (a) The concentrations of thymosin alpha1 in both serum and thymus of rat showed a nyctohemeral profile with peak values late at night and basal values during the day. The concentrations of thymulin in rat serum also showed a 24-h rhythm with an increase in their values at night. This rhythmical character for thymosin alpha1, and thymulin was also found in the human serum. (b) Rats injected with melatonin during the day exhibited a significant increase in the concentrations of both peptides. Moreover, continuous light exposure on the animals at daytime and pinealectomy cause a decrease in thymosin a1 and thymulin concentrations with regards to those found in control rats. (c) Melatonin regulates the expression of the prothymosin alpha gene, analyzed by Northern blot. These results suggest that melatonin may be involved in the regulation of immune functions by increasing the thymic peptides production.
Study Information
pubmed
2000
2000-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/s0165-5728(99)00237-4