Effect of synthetic thymic hormones on the cocaine-induced inhibition of the primary immune response in mice.
Ravagnan. G G; Falchetti. R R; Lanzilli. G G; Di Francesco. P P; Gaziano. R R; Favalli. C C; Garaci. E E
Key Findings
- Cocaine significantly reduces the primary antibody response to a test antigen in mice.
- Both thymosin‑alpha‑1 and thymopentin restore the impaired immune response when administered alongside cocaine.
- The two peptides work similarly overall, though they show different dose‑response patterns.
Practical Outcomes
- The findings suggest thymosin‑alpha‑1 can counteract cocaine‑related immune suppression in mice, but they don’t provide a usable protocol for general health or performance enhancement. For most biohackers, the result is of limited relevance unless they are specifically dealing with cocaine‑induced immune issues, and human data are needed before any practical application.
Summary
In mice, cocaine weakens the body's ability to make antibodies, but giving the peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 (or a similar peptide called TP5) during and after cocaine use helps the immune system bounce back. The study was done in animals, not people, and focuses on a drug‑specific problem rather than general health.
Abstract
The effects of thymosin alpha 1 (T alpha 1) and thymopentin (TP5) on the cocaine-induced impairment of the primary antibody response to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) was studied. The administration of cocaine from day -4 to the day of immunization (day 0) induced a significant impairment of the response to the T-dependent antigen SRBC, as evaluated on day 5 post-immunization by the Splenocyte-Induced SRBC Hemolysis (SIH) assay. The analysis of the responses to immunogen elicited from each single mouse indicated that, under the experimental conditions used, cocaine acted by exerting more an "all or nothing" effect rather than by modulating the strength of the immune response. Both T alpha 1 and TP5, injected into mice during cocaine administration and for 4 days after, induced a significant recovery of the response to SRBC. Our experiments did not show any great differences in the overall efficacy of the two drugs, although they showed quite a different dose-response effect. The results of the present investigation demonstrated the capability of TP5 and T alpha 1 to reverse the cocaine-induced impairment of the response to SRBC and suggested that the effect of the two peptides may be related to their immunomodulating activities on T-cell functions.
Study Information
pubmed
1993
10.1016/0192-0561(93)90005-j