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Thymosin β4 — Canada Research Brief

By Dr. Elena Morozova, PhDReviewed by Dr. Elena Morozova, PhDPublished April 11, 2026Last reviewed April 11, 20261 min read
Quick answer

Thymosin β4 (Tβ4) is a naturally occurring 43-amino-acid actin-sequestering peptide, the full-length parent of the TB-500 research fragment, studied clinically for wound healing, dry-eye disease, and cardiac repair.

Key facts

Canonical nameThymosin β4
Alternate namesTβ4, Timbetasin, TMSB4X
Drug classFull-length 43-amino-acid actin-sequestering peptide
CAS number77591-33-4
Molecular formulaC212H350N56O78S
Molecular weight4963.44 g/mol
COA pending

Origin and biological role

Thymosin β4 was originally isolated from bovine thymus tissue by Low and Goldstein in the 1980s, but it is now known to be expressed in almost all mammalian cells. Its principal molecular role is to sequester G-actin monomers and thereby regulate the pool available for F-actin filament assembly. At typical cellular concentrations, Tβ4 binds roughly half of the unpolymerised actin in a cell.

Clinical trial history

Unlike most research peptides, thymosin β4 has a real clinical trial record:

  • Epidermolysis bullosa (RGN-137) — topical Tβ4 tested in dystrophic EB for accelerated wound closure; did not meet primary endpoint in phase-3.
  • Dry eye disease (RGN-259) — phase-3 trials showed modest benefit on corneal staining and symptom scores; no approval as of publication.
  • Post-myocardial infarction cardiac repair — early-phase trials building on Bock-Marquette et al. (Nature 2004); no approved indication.

This clinical history is why Tβ4 is sometimes referred to as "the peptide that didn't make it" — real trials, real endpoints, and results that didn't quite cross the approval threshold.

Comparisons

Storage

Store lyophilised thymosin β4 at −20°C. Reconstituted material is stable refrigerated at 2–8°C for 2–4 weeks.

Frequently asked questions

What is thymosin β4?
Thymosin β4 is a naturally occurring 43-amino-acid peptide and the principal G-actin-sequestering molecule in mammalian cells. It is present in most tissues and in particularly high concentrations in blood platelets. It regulates the pool of actin monomers available for filament assembly, which underpins its effects on cell migration, angiogenesis, and wound repair.
How is thymosin β4 different from TB-500?
Thymosin β4 is the full 43-residue peptide. TB-500 is a short synthetic fragment (residues 17–23) comprising only the actin-binding motif. Tβ4 has a more complete biological profile and is what clinical trials have actually tested; TB-500 is a shorter, cheaper research fragment used as a proxy.
Has thymosin β4 been tested in humans?
Yes. Clinical trials have been run in epidermolysis bullosa (dermal wound healing), dry-eye disease (RGN-259), cardiac repair after myocardial infarction, and pressure-ulcer healing. Results have been mixed, and no Tβ4 product has been approved for clinical use in Canada as of publication.
What is thymosin β4's molecular weight?
Thymosin β4 has a molecular weight of approximately 4,963.44 g/mol, a molecular formula of C212H350N56O78S, and CAS number 77591-33-4. The human gene is TMSB4X on the X chromosome.

References

  1. [1]Bock-Marquette I, Saxena A, White MD, et al.. Thymosin beta4 activates integrin-linked kinase and promotes cardiac cell migration, survival, and cardiac repair. Nature, 2004. PMID: 15306811
  2. [2]Wikipedia contributors. Thymosin beta4 — Wikipedia, 2024
  3. [3]UniProt Consortium. UniProt P62328 — Thymosin β4, 2024

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