Increased circulation of T lymphocytes bearing surface thymosin alpha 1 in patients with myasthenia gravis: effect of thymectomy.
Dalakas. M C MC; Rose. J W JW; Paul. J J; Engel. W K WK; McClure. J E JE; Goldstein. A L AL
Key Findings
- Symptomatic MG patients have higher numbers of T‑cells bearing surface thymosin‑alpha‑1
- Asymptomatic MG patients have normal thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels
- Thymectomy normalizes thymosin‑alpha‑1‑positive T‑cell counts within a month
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers this research isn’t directly useful—there’s no clear protocol or dosage to apply. It mainly shows thymosin‑alpha‑1 could be a marker of thymus activity in a specific autoimmune disease, not a general longevity or performance tool.
Summary
The study found that people with active myasthenia gravis have more immune cells showing the protein thymosin‑alpha‑1 on their surface, and these levels go back to normal after the thymus is removed, suggesting the protein is linked to disease activity but not offering a direct health hack for most people.
Abstract
We studied the interaction of the thymic hormone thymosin alpha 1 with peripheral blood B and T lymphocytes in patients with myasthenia gravis (MG), using antibodies against thymosin alpha 1 in an immunofluorescence technique. Eleven of 16 patients with symptomatic MG had an increased number of T lymphocytes bearing surface thymosin alpha 1 (T alpha 1); 5 patients with asymptomatic disease had normal levels of T alpha 1. In six young adults with symptomatic MG who subsequently responded to thymectomy, the number of T alpha 1 cells returned to normal 1 month after thymectomy. Because levels of T alpha 1 correlated with symptoms and thymosin alpha 1 specifically recruits helper T cells, our findings suggest that T alpha 1 may play an immunoregulatory role in the pathogenesis of MG. Determination of T alpha 1 levels may prove to be helpful in assessing residual thymic activity after thymectomy.
Study Information
pubmed
1983
10.1212/wnl.33.2.144