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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
1983 pubmed 15 citations

Observations on N alpha-deacetylation of model amino acids and peptides: distribution and purification of a specific N-acyl amino acid releasing enzyme in rat brain.

Marks. N N; Lo. E S ES; Stern. F F; Danho. W W

Key Findings

  • A specific N‑acyl amino‑acid releasing enzyme (NAARE) is abundant in rat brain cytosol and pituitary.
  • NAARE efficiently hydrolyzes very short N‑acetylated peptides (e.g., acetylMet‑Ala) but not longer ones with five or more residues.
  • Thymosin‑alpha‑1, which has an N‑terminal acetylated serine, is not a substrate for this enzyme, indicating it is stable against this brain‑specific cleavage.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers and self‑experimenters, the paper offers no actionable guidance on using thymosin‑alpha‑1. It simply suggests that the peptide is unlikely to be broken down by this particular brain enzyme, but the finding does not translate into dosing, safety, or performance recommendations.

Summary

The study describes a brain enzyme that breaks down tiny peptides with an acetyl group at the start, but it does not affect larger acetyl‑blocked peptides like thymosin‑alpha‑1. It mainly maps where the enzyme is found in rat brain and how it works on very short sequences.

Abstract

N alpha-Acyl amino acid releasing enzyme (NAARE), an enzyme cleaving acetylMet-Ala at the Met-Ala bond was purified from rat brain cytosol to apparent homogeneity by salt precipitation, gel filtration, and several steps of ion exchange. Levels of NAARE exceeded acylase measured with acetylmethionine in all brain regions and subcellular fractions examined: 60% was associated with cytosol and the remainder with debris or the crude nuclear and mitochondrial-synaptosomal subfractions. Activity was highest in pituitary and was approximately 0.5-0.6 that of liver or kidney. The purified enzyme preferentially hydrolyzed acetylmethionyl peptides: Km for acetylMet-Ala was 0.93; Vmax, 3.5 nmol-1 (kcat, 1185) with pH optimum of 8.9 as compared with 8.2 for acylases measured in cytosol. The purified enzyme was devoid of acylase and common exo- and endopeptidase contamination. Structure-activity relationships examined with synthetic formylated or acetylated peptides indicated no significant effects for di- or tripeptides if the second substituent was Ala, Ser, Asn, or Thr, but the activity was reduced 0.5-fold for Leu, a branched-chain amino acid. No hydrolysis was observed for polypeptides with five or more residues having N-terminal acetylated Tyr (enkephalin) or Ser (alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, thymosin alpha 1), supporting the notion that the enzyme plays a role only in turnover of smaller peptides formed perhaps as a result of endopeptidase cleavage of proteins or polypeptides containing acetylated Met at the N terminus.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1983

Date

1983-01-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1471-4159.1983.tb13670.x

Citations

15

References

42