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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
1987 pubmed 30 citations

An enzyme immunoassay for synthetic thymulin.

Métreau. E E; Pléau. J M JM; Dardenne. M M; Bach. J F JF; Pradelles. P P

Key Findings

  • The new enzyme immunoassay can detect thymulin as low as 5 pg/ml with an IC50 of ~32 pg/ml.
  • Only the C‑terminal part of thymulin (Lys3‑Asn9) is needed for the test’s competition reaction.
  • Zinc‑bound (active) thymulin and zinc‑free thymulin show the same test signal, and other thymic hormones don’t cross‑react.

Practical Outcomes

  • The assay is a technical tool for researchers to measure thymulin in samples, but it doesn’t provide dosing guidance, safety data, or performance benefits for self‑experimenters.

Summary

Scientists created a lab test to measure tiny amounts of a synthetic peptide called thymulin, but the study doesn’t give any advice on how to use thymosin‑alpha‑1 or improve health, so it isn’t directly useful for DIY health enthusiasts.

Abstract

Thymulin, a metallononapeptide with the following aminoacid sequence: pyroGlu-Ala-Lys-Ser-Gln-Gly-Gly-Ser-AsnOH is a thymic hormone involved in T cell differentiation requiring zinc to express biological activity as measured by the rosette assay. We established an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for synthetic zinc-free thymulin with a thymulin-acetylcholinesterase conjugate as tracer and specific polyclonal rabbit antithymulin antibodies. The assay is performed as a classical competition assay in microtiter plates previously coated with mouse monoclonal IgG to rabbit IgG. A quantitative thymulin assay more sensitive than radioimmunoassays (RIAs) previously described was obtained with a sensitivity (IC50) of 32.5 +/- 5 pg/ml and a detection limit of 5 pg/ml. Analysis in the EIA of synthetic thymulin analogs showed that the minimal peptidic structure necessary for enzymatic tracer competition is the C-terminal part Lys3 to Asn9. It was also shown that the biologically active form of thymulin (zinc-bound) has the same immunoreactivity as zinc-free thymulin and that other thymic hormones, thymosin alpha 1 and thymopoietin II (or TP5) and unrelated short peptides do not cross-react with thymulin. These data demonstrate the specificity of this EIA for thymulin and show its suitability for application in biological fluids.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1987

Date

1987-09-24T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/0022-1759(87)90082-2

Citations

30

References

24