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Thymosin-beta-4-fragment

Ac-SDKP, Goralatide, Seraspenide

Quick Stats
Studies 83
Trials 3
Score 1
1997 pubmed

A novel beta-thymosin from the sea urchin: extending the phylogenetic distribution of beta-thymosins from mammals to echinoderms.

Stoeva. S S; Hörger. S S; Voelter. W W

Key Findings

  • A 40‑amino‑acid peptide (thymosin beta‑14) was isolated from sea urchin tissue.
  • The peptide is 73% similar to mammalian thymosin beta‑4 and has an acetyl‑blocked N‑terminus.
  • The work expands the known evolutionary range of beta‑thymosins to include echinoderms.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research doesn’t provide any new dosing guidelines, safety data, or performance benefits. It’s mainly a basic science discovery that may inform future studies, but there’s no actionable protocol to apply right now.

Summary

Scientists found a new version of the peptide thymosin‑beta, called thymosin beta‑14, in sea urchins. It’s a small protein of 40 amino acids that looks a lot like the well‑known thymosin beta‑4 from mammals, but the study only describes its structure, not any health effects.

Abstract

The study of the phylogenetic distribution of the beta-thymosin family is important to elucidate its biological function further. A new thymosin, designated as thymosin beta 14, consisting of 40 amino acid residues and with a molecular weight of 4537 Da as determined by ion spray mass spectrometry, was isolated from the sea urchin. The N-terminus of this polypeptide is blocked by an acetyl group as found by matrix-assisted laser desorption mass spectrometric and amino acid analysis. The primary structure was elucidate by Edman degradation of the HPLC-purified thymosin beta 14 fragments produced by digestion with endoproteinase Asp-N and trypsin. Sequence comparison reveals that thymosin beta 14 is 73% homologous to thymosin beta 4, obtained from calf thymus. By isolating and characterising the structure of thymosin beta 14 from the sea urchin, an invertebrate, substantial knowledge about the phylogenetic distribution and evolution of beta-thymosins is gained.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1997

DOI

10.1002/(sici)1099-1387(199707)3:4%3c282::aid-psc119%3e3.0.co;2-a