Radioimmunoassays for the C-terminus of prothymosin alpha and the N-terminus of parathymosin alpha for the measurement of the levels of alpha-thymosins in human cancer.
Tsitsiloni. O E OE; Heimer. E E; Felix. A A; Yialouris. P P PP; Vamvoukakis. J J; Voelter. W W; Haritos. A A AA
Key Findings
- New radioimmunoassays can accurately detect intact prothymosin‑alpha and parathymosin‑alpha in tissue samples
- Both proteins are present at dramatically higher levels in breast cancer tissue compared to healthy tissue
- The elevated levels suggest these proteins may play a role in cell growth and could become cancer biomarkers
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study doesn’t provide a new protocol or dosage for thymosin‑alpha‑1. It mainly offers a research tool and hints that related proteins are linked to cancer growth, which may inform future diagnostic tests but has no immediate DIY application.
Summary
Scientists created blood‑test‑style assays to measure two related proteins, prothymosin‑alpha and parathymosin‑alpha, and found they’re much higher (about 14‑times) in breast cancer tissue than in nearby normal tissue. The work is about measuring these proteins, not about using thymosin‑alpha‑1 as a supplement.
Abstract
A radioimmunoassay specific for the C-terminus of human prothymosin alpha was developed using the synthetic peptide [Cys-Aca degrees]-human prothymosin alpha (90-109)-OH coupled to KLH as antigen and the analogue [Tyr-Aca degrees]-human prothymosin alpha (90-109)-OH labelled with 125I as tracer. The radioimmunoassay measured intact prothymosin alpha, in the range of 2-100 pmol and does not cross-react with the partly homologous polypeptide parathymosin alpha. A major epitope was located in the segment 95-107. A radioimmunoassay specific for the N-terminus of human parathymosin alpha, also measuring intact parathymosin alpha in the range of 1-20 pmol and not cross-reacting with prothymosin alpha, was developed using the synthetic peptide [Cys-Aca degrees]-human parathymosin alpha (1-30)-OH as antigen coupled to KLH and the analogue [Tyr-Aca degrees]-human parathymosin alpha (1-10)-OH labelled with 125I as tracer. A major epitope was located in the segment 1-10. These radioimmunoassays, together with a previously established radioimmunoassay for the N-terminus of prothymosin alpha, permitted the identification of the molecular forms of the cross-reactive materials in both normal and neoplastic breast tissue extracts as intact prothymosin alpha and parathymosin alpha. It was also possible to reveal significantly higher levels of both alpha-thymosins in breast cancer tissue compared to the nearby healthy tissue--the mean of 14 samples was over 14-fold higher--suggesting a role of both prothymosin alpha and parathymosin alpha in cell proliferation. The reported radioimmunoassays are expected to facilitate the search for prognostic and/or diagnostic applications of these polypeptides in human cancer.
Study Information
pubmed
1994
1994-03-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/0022-1759(94)90260-7
9
21