Protective activity of thymosin against opportunistic infections in animal models.
Ishitsuka. H H; Umeda. Y Y; Nakamura. J J; Yagi. Y Y
Key Findings
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 protected immunosuppressed mice from lethal Candida, Listeria, Pseudomonas, and Serratia infections
- Effective at 0.4‑400 µg/kg/day IP, about 1/100 the dose needed for thymosin fraction 5
- Protection involved macrophages/T‑cells for Candida and neutrophils for Pseudomonas, showing multiple immune pathways
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests thymosin‑alpha‑1 could be a potent immune‑support agent, especially when the immune system is compromised. However, the data are from animal models using injectable doses, so direct human dosing and safety are unclear. Biohackers should treat this as preliminary evidence and await clinical trials before self‑administration.
Summary
In mice whose immune systems were weakened by a chemotherapy drug, giving thymosin‑alpha‑1 helped them survive deadly infections from fungi and bacteria. It worked at very low doses compared to older thymosin mixtures and seemed to boost the activity of immune cells like macrophages, T‑cells, and neutrophils.
Abstract
Animal models for opportunistic infections were developed by using mice immunosuppressed by 5-FU. These mice were susceptible to various microorganisms, while normal mice had greater tolerance to such microbial infections. In these models, thymosin alpha 1 was found to protect mice against lethal infections with Candida albicans, Listeria monocytogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Serratia marcescens when it was administered during 5-FU treatment prior to the infections. Thymosin alpha 1 was effective in some infections at 0.4-400 micrograms/kg/day IP, about 1/100 of the dose required for thymosin fraction 5. Activity was also demonstrated against L-monocytogenes and Ps. aeruginosa by counting the viable bacteria in the liver after infection. The protective activity against Candida, elimination of which macrophages were essential, was abrogated by anti-thymocyte serum and/or carrageenan, indicating that thymosin alpha 1 serves to maintain the functions of macrophages by reducing the damage to T cells by 5-FU. On the other hand, the activity against Pseudomonas infection was not affected by anti-thymocyte serum or carrageenan. It is probable that thymosin alpha 1 also exerts its effect on neutrophils without participation of T cells and macrophages.
Study Information
pubmed
1983
10.1007/bf00205352