Modulation of thymosin beta 4 by estrogen.
Suh. B Y BY; Naylor. P H PH; Goldstein. A L AL; Rebar. R W RW
Key Findings
- Estrogen reduces circulating thymosin beta‑4
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels stay the same regardless of estrogen
- Both natural estrogen loss and estrogen therapy lower thymosin beta‑4
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers using thymosin‑alpha‑1, estrogen status doesn’t seem to matter, so no dosing changes are needed. The findings mainly inform those interested in thymosin beta‑4, suggesting estrogen levels could influence its availability, but this has limited direct application for most longevity protocols.
Summary
The study looked at how estrogen affects two thymus‑derived peptides. It found that estrogen lowers the blood level of thymosin beta‑4 but does not change thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels. The effect was seen in women without natural estrogen and those taking estrogen supplements.
Abstract
The endocrine thymus produces several hormone-like peptides (generically termed thymosins) which control development of the thymic-dependent lymphoid system and participate in the process of immune regulation. In addition, recent literature supports the hypothesis that gonadal steroids in general and estrogens in particular affect the immune system. To determine whether steroid hormones modulate secretion of thymic peptides, basal concentrations of thymosins alpha 1 and beta 4 were determined by radioimmunoassay in morning blood samples from 87 women in various clinical states. Basal concentrations of thymosin alpha 1 were similar in all women sampled. Basal levels of thymosin beta 4 were similar in normal women during the early follicular phase, women with premature ovarian failure, postmenopausal women not receiving estrogen, and individuals with gonadal dysgenesis. However, the marked variability of basal levels in premature ovarian failure and in postmenopausal women suggests that these groups are quite heterogeneous. Thymosin beta 4 concentrations were reduced in castrated women not receiving estrogen and were decreased more in both postmenopausal women and castrated women who were on chronic estrogen therapy. These data suggest that estrogens can modulate the circulating levels of thymosin beta 4 but not of thymosin alpha 1. We do not yet know whether sex steroids modulate secretion of other thymic peptides.
Study Information
pubmed
1985
1985-02-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/0002-9378(85)90286-8
23
22