Production of human B and T cell growth factors is enhanced by thymic hormones.
Kouttab. N M NM; Goldstein. A L AL; Lu. M M; Lu. L L; Campbell. B B; Maizel. A L AL
Key Findings
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 increases production of a B‑cell growth factor (BCGF‑12kD) by human immune cells
- It also raises IL‑2, a key T‑cell growth factor, at 100‑200‑fold lower concentrations than thymosin fraction 5
- The boost occurs only when peripheral blood mononuclear cells are pre‑activated (e.g., with lectin) and not on isolated B or T cells
Practical Outcomes
- Low‑dose thymosin‑alpha‑1 could potentially enhance immune signaling when the immune system is already stimulated, but there’s no direct evidence for a simple supplement regimen. More human studies are needed before recommending specific dosing or protocols for biohackers.
Summary
The study shows that the synthetic peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 can make immune cells produce more B‑cell and T‑cell growth signals, but only when those cells are already activated, and it works at much lower doses than older thymic extracts. This hints it might boost immune signaling, though the work was done in a lab dish, not in people.
Abstract
The thymic preparations thymosin fraction 5 (TF5) and synthetic thymosin alpha 1 (T alpha 1) were examined for their ability to enhance growth factor production by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). The results showed that both TF5 and T alpha 1 were capable of enhancing the production of a B cell growth factor (BCGF-12kD) and T cell growth factor (TCGF; IL-2). Enhancement by T alpha 1 could be obtained at 100-200-fold lower concentrations than that seen with TF5. In contrast, no enhancement of growth factor production was obtained with control preparations of non-thymic tissue extracts at any concentrations used. It was observed that stimulation of BCGF-12kD and IL-2 was most significantly obtained when the PBMC were activated with lectin. Furthermore, no direct effect of thymic hormones on test B and T cells was observed. These observations provide the first direct evidence that production of B cell growth factors can be enhanced by thymic hormones. In addition, these studies suggest that thymic hormones may regulate B cell responses by acting on mature activated T lymphocytes.
Study Information
pubmed
1988
1988-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/0162-3109(88)90018-5
27
37