Thymulin

Research Use Only Immune Modulation

A zinc-dependent thymic hormone that regulates T-cell development and declines dramatically with age.

Also Known As
Facteur Thymique Serique (FTS), Serum Thymic Factor, Zinc-FTS
Status
Research Use Only
Category
Immune Modulation
Route
Subcutaneous injection (research)

What Is Thymulin?

Thymulin (formerly called Facteur Thymique Sérique or FTS) is a nonapeptide hormone produced exclusively by thymic epithelial cells. It is unique among thymic peptides in requiring zinc for biological activity — the active form is a zinc-thymulin complex. Thymulin promotes T-lymphocyte differentiation and maturation, enhances NK cell activity, and modulates inflammatory cytokine production.

Thymulin levels peak in adolescence and decline progressively with age, closely paralleling thymic involution. By age 60, circulating thymulin is often undetectable. This age-related decline correlates with reduced immune competence, increased susceptibility to infections, and impaired vaccine responses in elderly populations.

Research interest in thymulin supplementation focuses on restoring immune function in aging, enhancing vaccine efficacy, and modulating inflammatory and autoimmune conditions. Its zinc requirement also highlights the interplay between zinc status and immune function.

What The Research Says

Animal studies demonstrate thymulin supplementation restores T-cell subsets in aged mice, improves vaccine responses, and reduces inflammatory markers associated with aging (inflammaging). Zinc-thymulin complexes show anti-nociceptive (pain-reducing) effects in inflammatory pain models.

Human observational data confirms thymulin decline with aging. Small clinical studies in elderly populations show thymulin supplementation can partially restore T-cell function markers. The zinc dependency means that zinc-deficient individuals may have compounded thymulin deficiency.

📚 Key Reference: PMID: 2474563 (thymulin aging), PMID: 8307034 (zinc-thymulin)

Common Uses

Important Safety Information

Limited human clinical data. Preclinical safety is favorable. As an endogenous thymic hormone, theoretical toxicity is low. Zinc supplementation should be monitored to avoid copper deficiency. Consult your provider.

Questions To Ask Your Provider

  1. What are my baseline immune markers?
  2. Has zinc status been assessed?
  3. How does thymulin compare to thymosin alpha-1?

Regulatory Status

NOT FDA-approved. Research use only.

Find a Provider Who Offers Thymulin

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Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only. PepKey does not diagnose, prescribe, or recommend dosages. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting any peptide therapy. Full disclosure
Last updated: 2026-04-08 · ← Back to Peptide Library