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Chonluten vs Thymosin Alpha-1

A side-by-side research comparison of Chonluten and Thymosin Alpha-1 across mechanism, dosing, half-life, benefits, side effects and research status.

Comparison table

AttributeChonlutenThymosin Alpha-1
Full nameChonluten (Glu-Asp-Gly Bronchopulmonary Bioregulator)Thymosin Alpha-1 (Thymalfasin)
CategoryImmune SupportImmune Support
StatusResearch compound (peptide bioregulator)Approved internationally (not FDA-approved)
MechanismAs a signal peptide (Glu-Asp-Gly), it is proposed to regulate gene expression in respiratory epithelial and mucosal tissue, supporting airway lining integrity, antioxidant defense, and local immune function.Activates toll-like receptors (TLR2, TLR9) on dendritic cells, promotes T-cell maturation and differentiation, enhances NK cell cytotoxicity, and modulates cytokine profiles.
Molecular weight~318 Da3108.3 Da
Half-lifeShort (peptide)~2-3 hours
BioavailabilityOral (encapsulated) or subcutaneous~85% subcutaneous
Typical dose~1-2 capsules/day or short injectable courses1.6-3.2 mg
FrequencyOnce daily2-3x per week
RouteOral capsule or subcutaneousSubcutaneous injection

Chonluten reported benefits

  • Respiratory/airway support
  • Mucosal immune support
  • Antioxidant support in lung tissue (proposed)
  • Short course-based protocol

Thymosin Alpha-1 reported benefits

  • Enhanced T-cell immunity
  • Anti-viral activity
  • Dendritic cell activation
  • Cancer immunosurveillance
  • Vaccine adjuvant effects

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Research and educational reference only. Not medical advice.