beta-Thymosins, small acidic peptides with multiple functions.
Huff. T T; Müller. C S CS; Otto. A M AM; Netzker. R R; Hannappel. E E
Key Findings
- Beta‑thymosins bind G‑actin 1:1, acting as an intracellular actin buffer.
- Higher or abnormal beta‑thymosin levels may boost cell mobility and could aid cancer metastasis.
- Extracellular beta‑thymosins (including the fragment acSDKP) are associated with angiogenesis, chemotaxis, inflammation inhibition, and stem‑cell proliferation effects, but mechanisms remain unclear.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this means thymosin beta‑4 is biologically active and may influence tissue repair and inflammation, but there’s no clear dosing guidance or proven safety data yet. Until more research clarifies its external actions and risks, using it experimentally is not recommended for routine longevity or performance protocols.
Summary
Beta-thymosin peptides, especially thymosin beta‑4, are tiny proteins found in almost every cell where they hold onto single actin units, stopping them from forming fibers until the cell needs them. They also show up outside cells in blood and wound fluid and have been linked to things like new blood‑vessel growth, reduced inflammation, and possibly helping cancer cells move more easily, though we still don’t know exactly how they work outside the cell.
Abstract
The beta-thymosins are a family of highly conserved polar 5 kDa peptides originally thought to be thymic hormones. About 10 years ago, thymosin beta(4) as well as other members of this ubiquitous peptide family were identified as the main intracellular G-actin sequestering peptides, being present in high concentrations in almost every cell. beta-Thymosins bind monomeric actin in a 1:1 complex and act as actin buffers, preventing polymerization into actin filaments but supplying a pool of actin monomers when the cell needs filaments. Changes in the expression of beta-thymosins appear to be related to the differentiation of cells. Increased expression of beta-thymosins or even the synthesis of a beta-thymosin normally not expressed might promote metastasis possibly by increasing mobility of the cells. Thymosin beta(4) is detected outside of cells in blood plasma or in wound fluid. Several biological effects are attributed to thymosin beta(4), oxidized thymosin beta(4), or to the fragment, acSDKP, possibly generated from thymosin beta(4). Among the effects are induction of metallo-proteinases, chemotaxis, angiogenesis and inhibition of inflammation as well as the inhibition of bone marrow stem cell proliferation. However, nothing is known about the molecular mechanisms mediating the effects attributed to extracellular beta-thymosins.
Study Information
pubmed
2001
10.1016/s1357-2725(00)00087-x