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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 1
1989 pubmed

The thymus in acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Comparison with other types of immunodeficiency diseases, and presence of components of human immunodeficiency virus type 1.

Schuurman. H J HJ; Krone. W J WJ; Broekhuizen. R R; van Baarlen. J J; van Veen. P P; Golstein. A L AL; Huber. J J; Goudsmit. J J

Key Findings

  • AIDS thymus tissue is heavily involuted and looks similar to other immunodeficiencies
  • Only low numbers of HIV‑1 proteins were detected in thymus cells
  • Antibodies to HIV‑1 proteins bind thymosin‑alpha‑1, but this cross‑reactivity doesn’t fully explain labeling and hyperinvoluted thymus lacks thymosin‑alpha‑1

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters, the paper offers no actionable guidance on using thymosin‑alpha‑1 for immune or longevity benefits. It suggests that thymosin‑alpha‑1 isn’t a key factor in HIV‑related thymus damage, so no new dosing or protocol changes are supported.

Summary

The study looked at thymus tissue from AIDS patients and found it was severely shrunken, just like in other immune disorders, and only a few HIV proteins were present. It also showed that some HIV antibodies stick to thymosin‑alpha‑1, but this doesn’t fully explain the findings, and there’s no clear link to how the peptide works in the body.

Abstract

The authors studied thymus specimens taken at autopsy from eight acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients and compared these with those taken from four patients with congenital immunodeficiency (unrelated to an intrinsic thymus defect) and seven patients after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. In all cases, histology showed a severely involuted architecture, compatible with a debilitating disease before death. There were no major differences between thymus tissue in AIDS patients and in the other patients studied. This argues against the claim expressed in the literature that the epithelial microenvironment incurs particular HIV-1-induced injury in AIDS. This conclusion is substantiated by immunohistochemistry for HIV-1 gag and env proteins, and by hybridohistochemistry for gag/pol and env mRNA of HIV-1. Positive cells were observed only in low numbers, both inside the epithelial parenchyma and in the (expanded) perivascular areas. An interesting finding was the labeling of subcapsular/medullary epithelium in normal uninvoluted thymus by a number of antibodies to HIV-1 gag p17 and p24 proteins. Compatible with this labeling was the staining of epithelial stalks in hyperinvoluted thymuses irrespective of disease category. The previously reported cross-reactivity between HIV-1 core protein and thymosin alpha 1 cannot fully explain this observation, because the epithelium in the hyperinvoluted state is negative for thymosin alpha 1. This study confirms and extends previous reports on the endogenous presence of epitopes of retroviral antigens in thymic epithelium.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1989