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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 3
1987 pubmed

Modulation of human natural killer cell cytotoxic activity, lymphokine production, and interleukin 2 receptor expression by thymic hormones.

Serrate. S A SA; Schulof. R S RS; Leondaridis. L L; Goldstein. A L AL; Sztein. M B MB

Key Findings

  • Thymosin‑alpha‑1 (and the broader TF5 preparation) increases spontaneous NK cell activity in human lymphocytes
  • The peptide works additively with interferon‑alpha to further raise NK activity
  • It also raises IL‑2 production, IL‑2 receptor expression, and interferon‑γ release in stimulated cells

Practical Outcomes

  • Thymosin‑alpha‑1 may be useful as an immune‑support supplement to enhance NK cell function, but evidence is limited to in‑vitro work. Biohackers could consider low‑dose trials while tracking immune markers, yet should await human safety and dosing data before adopting it widely.

Summary

The study shows that thymosin‑alpha‑1, a peptide derived from thymic hormones, can boost the activity of natural killer (NK) cells and increase production of immune signaling molecules like IL‑2 and interferon‑γ in lab‑grown human immune cells, suggesting it may help enhance immune function.

Abstract

Thymic hormone preparations have been shown to modulate natural killer (NK) activity in vivo in mice. We have investigated the effects of thymosin fraction 5 (TF5) on the in vitro NK cell activity of highly purified human large granular lymphocytes (LGL). The results indicate that TF5 but not kidney fraction 5 (a preparation used as control) is able to enhance the spontaneous NK activity of normal LGL. In addition, TF5 exhibited additive effects with recombinant interferon-alpha in enhancing NK activity in vitro. TF5 also enhanced interleukin 2 production and interleukin 2 receptor expression as well as interferon-gamma production in mitogen-stimulated LGL. Thymosin-alpha 1, a synthetic polypeptide originally isolated in its native form from TF5, also exhibited enhancing effects on LGL activities, suggesting that it is the active species in TF5. These results indicate that thymic hormones might regulate NK activity through the induction of lymphokine production and receptor expression by LGL.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1987

Date

1987-10-01T00:00:00.000Z