Premium
Thymosin α1
Author(s) -
ROMANI LUIGINA,
BISTONI FRANCESCO,
MONTAGNOLI CLAUDIA,
GAZIANO ROBERTA,
BOZZA SILVIA,
BONIFAZI PIERLUIGI,
ZELANTE TERESA,
MORETTI SILVIA,
RASI GUIDO,
GARACI ENRICO,
PUCCETTI PAOLO
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
annals of the new york academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.712
H-Index - 248
eISSN - 1749-6632
pISSN - 0077-8923
DOI - 10.1196/annals.1415.002
Subject(s) - immunology , immune system , biology , immune tolerance , indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase , transplant rejection , tryptophan , biochemistry , amino acid
: Thymosin α1 (Tα1), first described and characterized by Allan Goldstein in 1972, is used worldwide for the treatment of some immunodeficiencies, malignancies, and infections. Although Tα1 has shown a variety of effects on cells and pathways of the immune system, its central role in modulating dendritic cell (DC) function has only recently been appreciated. As DCs have the ability to sense infection and tissue stress and to translate collectively this information into an appropriate immune response, an action on DCs would predict a central role for Tα1 in inducing different forms of immunity and tolerance. Recent results have shown that Tα1: ( a ) primed DCs for antifungal Th1 resistance through Toll‐like receptor (TLR)/MyD88‐dependent signaling and this translated in vivo in protection against aspergillosis; ( b ) activated plasmacytoid DCs (pDC) via the TLR9/MyD88‐dependent viral recognition, thus leading to the activation of interferon regulatory factor 7 and the promotion of the IFN‐α/IFN‐γ−dependent effector pathway, which resulted in vivo in protection against primary murine cytomegalovirus infection; ( c ) induced indoleamine 2,3‐dioxygenase activity in DCs, thus affecting tolerization toward self as well as microbial non‐self‐antigens, and this resulted in vivo in transplantation tolerance and protection from inflammatory allergy . Tα1 is produced in vivo by cleavage of prothymosin α in diverse mammalian tissues. Our data qualify Tα1 as an endogenous regulator of immune homeostasis and suggest that instructive immunotherapy with Tα1, via DCs and tryptophan catabolism, could be at work to control inflammation, immunity, and tolerance in a variety of clinical settings .