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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 1
2013 pubmed 34 citations

A tumor-penetrating peptide modification enhances the antitumor activity of thymosin alpha 1.

Lao. Xingzhen X; Liu. Meng M; Chen. Jiao J; Zheng. Heng H

Key Findings

  • Adding the iRGD fragment to thymosin‑alpha‑1 (creating Tα1‑iRGD) did not change its ability to stimulate mouse splenocyte proliferation.
  • Tα1‑iRGD bound more strongly and specifically to tumor cells than unmodified thymosin‑alpha‑1.
  • In vitro, Tα1‑iRGD showed greater inhibition of cancer cell growth (mouse melanoma B16F10 and human lung cancer H460) than the original peptide.

Practical Outcomes

  • The modified peptide is still at an early research stage and has only been tested in cell cultures and mouse cells. There is no human dosing information, safety data, or protocol for self‑administration, so it isn’t ready for biohackers to use. For now, the finding is mainly of interest to researchers developing new cancer therapies.

Summary

Scientists added a short tumor‑targeting sequence (iRGD) to the immune‑boosting peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 and found that the new version sticks better to cancer cells and slows their growth in lab tests, while still helping immune cells multiply.

Abstract

A serious limitation of numerous antitumor drugs is the incapacity to penetrate solid tumors. However, addition of an RGD fragment to peptide drugs might solve this problem. In this study, we explored whether the introduction of a permeability-enhancing sequence, such as iRGD (CRGDK/RGPD/EC) fragments, would enhance the activity of thymosin alpha 1 (Tα1). The modified Tα1 (Tα1-iRGD) was successfully expressed and purified, and the in vitro assay showed that Tα1-iRGD presented a similar activity as Tα1 in promoting proliferation of mouse splenocytes. Meanwhile, cell adhesion analysis revealed that Tα1-iRGD exhibited more specific and greater binding with tumor cells compared with Tα1. Furthermore, the iRGD fragment evidently enhanced the basal ability of Tα1 to inhibit proliferation of cancer cells in vitro, particularly of mouse melanoma cell line B16F10 and human lung cancer cell line H460. Our findings indicated that the addition of an iRGD fragment increased the anti-proliferative activity of Tα1 against cancer cells by improving the ability of Tα1 to penetrate the tumor cells. This study highlighted the important roles of an iRGD sequence in the therapeutic strategy of Tα1-iRGD. Thus, Tα1-iRGD could be a novel drug candidate for cancer treatment.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-08-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0072242

Citations

34

References

34