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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 1
1986 pubmed 48 citations

Thymosin alpha 1 and thymosin beta 4 in serum: comparison of normal, cord, homosexual and AIDS serum.

Naylor. P H PH; Friedman-Kien. A A; Hersh. E E; Erdos. M M; Goldstein. A L AL

Key Findings

  • Normal thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels are about 650‑670 pg/ml and thymosin‑beta‑4 about 890‑970 ng/ml, with no correlation between them in healthy people.
  • Many AIDS patients show elevated levels of one or both peptides, but thymosin‑alpha‑1 is more frequently high in those with AIDS‑related immune problems.
  • The two peptides appear to be regulated separately, suggesting they could serve as distinct biomarkers for immune status.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, the data offer little direct action—there’s no dosing guidance or clear health benefit. It may hint that measuring these peptides could help monitor immune health in specific disease contexts, but it isn’t a practical tool for general longevity or performance optimization.

Summary

The study measured two immune‑related peptides, thymosin‑alpha‑1 and thymosin‑beta‑4, in blood from healthy people, newborns, homosexual men, and AIDS patients, finding that their levels vary independently and are often higher in AIDS, especially thymosin‑alpha‑1.

Abstract

Thymosin alpha 1 and thymosin beta 4 were first isolated from thymosin fr. 5 and have demonstrated biological activities on the immune system. They are chemically distinct and differ in their immunological activity profiles. The levels of thymosin alpha 1 and thymosin beta 4 were assessed by radioimmunoassay in the same serum samples. Normal thymosin alpha 1 levels were 670 +/- 163 pg/ml for males and 652 +/- 162 pg/ml for females. Normal thymosin beta 4 levels were 974 +/- 400 ng/ml for males and 889 +/- 345 ng/ml for females. No correlation between the levels of the peptides in serum from normal donors was observed. Although many samples of serum from neonates (cord blood), homosexuals and AIDS patients had elevated levels of one or both peptides, no correlation between the two peptides was found. Of potential significance is the observation that while thymosin alpha 1 and beta 4 are elevated in many individuals with AIDS (57 and 48% respectively), the individuals with AIDS related immune dysfunctions had predominantly elevated thymosin alpha 1 (54 vs 15%). These studies suggest that serum levels of the two peptides are modulated separately and that both are of potential value in defining the risk of individuals for developing AIDS.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1986

DOI

10.1016/0192-0561(86)90001-9

Citations

48

References

23