Thymosin Alpha-1
Thymosin Alpha-1 is a naturally occurring peptide studied for its role in immune signaling, particularly T-cell activation and cytokine pathway regulation [1,2].
This peptide is for research purposes only. Not for human consumption.
Description
Immune Pathway Signaling
Research models examine Thymosin Alpha-1 in relation to innate and adaptive immune signaling, including Toll-like receptor pathways and cytokine modulation [1].
T-Cell Activation Studies
Studies focus on how this peptide influences T-cell differentiation, antigen presentation signaling, and immune response coordination [2].
Peptide Structure and Stability
Its well-defined sequence supports reproducible studies of immune signaling kinetics and pathway interaction [1].
Key Specs
- Peptide length: 28 amino acids
- Research context: immune and cytokine signaling
- References: PubChem, PubMed [1,2]
Referenced Citations
- PubChem, Thymosin Alpha-1: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Thymosin-alpha-1
- PubMed, Thymosin Alpha-1 immune signaling: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17193831/
Immune Pathway Signaling
Research models examine Thymosin Alpha-1 in relation to innate and adaptive immune signaling, including Toll-like receptor pathways and cytokine modulation [1].
T-Cell Activation Studies
Studies focus on how this peptide influences T-cell differentiation, antigen presentation signaling, and immune response coordination [2].
Peptide Structure and Stability
Its well-defined sequence supports reproducible studies of immune signaling kinetics and pathway interaction [1].
Key Specs
- Peptide length: 28 amino acids
- Research context: immune and cytokine signaling
- References: PubChem, PubMed [1,2]
Referenced Citations
- PubChem, Thymosin Alpha-1: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Thymosin-alpha-1
- PubMed, Thymosin Alpha-1 immune signaling: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17193831/






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