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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 1
1996 pubmed

Regulation of prothymosin alpha during the cell cycle.

Vareli. K K; Tsolas. O O; Frangou-Lazaridis. M M

Key Findings

  • Prothymosin alpha, not thymosin‑alpha‑1, is the protein studied
  • Its mRNA and protein levels peak in the S/G2 phase of the cell cycle
  • E2F transcription factor strongly boosts prothymosin alpha gene expression

Practical Outcomes

  • The paper doesn’t provide any dosing or usage tips for thymosin‑alpha‑1. It mainly warns that the two molecules are different and that prothymosin alpha is linked to cell proliferation, so it has limited direct use for longevity or performance protocols.

Summary

This study looked at a protein called prothymosin alpha, not the peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 that many biohackers use. It found that prothymosin alpha builds up in the cell nucleus during the DNA‑making phase of cell division and is turned on by the E2F transcription factor, suggesting it helps cells decide when to divide.

Abstract

A number of studies have indicated that the small nuclear acidic protein prothymosin alpha is associated with cellular-proliferation events. For example, c-myc causes immediate transcriptional activation of prothymosin alpha, and prothymosin alpha antisense oligonucleotides inhibit myeloma cell division. To investigate the regulation of prothymosin alpha, we examined its mRNA and protein levels during the cell cycle of mononuclear cells and fibroblastic cells. We isolated immunoreactive material from cellular extracts and immunolocalized the protein to the nucleus during the cell cycle. We reported here that the material present in the cells is prothymosin alpha rather than the amino-terminal peptide thymosin alpha 1. [3H]Thymidine-incorporation studies associate maximum accumulation of mRNA and protein with the S/G2 phase of the cell cycle. This induction of prothymosin alpha mRNA seems to resemble cyclin B expression and is more pronounced in fibroblasts. Moreover, transient-transfection experiments indicate that transcription factor E2F is a strong positive regulator of the prothymosin alpha gene. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that prothymosin alpha is involved in proliferation checkpoints of the cell cycle.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1996

Date

1996-06-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1432-1033.1996.0799w.x