CalcMyPeptide
Immune & ThymicAlso known as: Glu-Trp, EW dipeptide, α-glutamyl-tryptophan

Thymogen

Synthetic dipeptide (Glu-Trp) with thymopoietic activity — approved in Russia for immunodeficiency states, post-radiation immune recovery, and chronic infections.

Half-Life
~20-30 minutes
Dose Range
100-1000 mcg/day (intranasal or SC)
Frequency
1× daily for 3-10 days
Vial Sizes
1 mg, 5 mg

🔬 Mechanism of Action

Thymogen (α-glutamyl-tryptophan, Glu-Trp) is a synthetic dipeptide developed in Russia as a thymopoietic agent. It was designed based on the observation that the Glu-Trp dipeptide sequence appears in several natural thymic peptide hormones and has intrinsic immunomodulatory activity.

Thymogen stimulates production of thymic serum factor (thymulin) by thymic epithelial cells, enhances T-cell differentiation markers (CD3, CD4, CD8), normalizes the Th1/Th2 cytokine ratio, and improves NK cell activity. It is approved in Russia as an intranasal spray and injection for: secondary immunodeficiency states, post-radiation immune recovery, chronic bacterial and viral infections, and as an adjunct in cancer immunotherapy.

The intranasal spray form (Thymogen spray, 25 mcg/dose) is available over-the-counter in Russian pharmacies.

Source: PMID: 15677927

📜Background & History

Thymogen (Glu-Trp, EW dipeptide) was developed at the Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology in St. Petersburg as part of Professor Khavinson's peptide bioregulator program. It is distinguished from most bioregulators by its approval status — Thymogen is registered as a pharmaceutical product in the Russian Federation (registration number P N000313/01) and available as both an intranasal spray (25 mcg/dose, OTC) and injection (100 mcg/mL, prescription). It is one of the most widely used thymic immunomodulators in Russian clinical practice.

🎯 Research Use Cases

  • Secondary immunodeficiency (post-infection, post-surgery)
  • Chronic bacterial and viral infection adjunct
  • Post-radiation immune recovery
  • Seasonal immune support (cold/flu prevention)

💉 Dosing Protocol

Typical Dose100-1000 mcg/day (intranasal or SC)
Frequency1× daily for 3-10 days
Half-Life~20-30 minutes
Common Vial Sizes1 mg, 5 mg

🧪 Reconstitution Example

Vial
1 mg
Water
1 mL
Concentration
1 mg/mL
Per Unit (100u syringe)
10 mcg
Dose of 100 mcg = 10 units on a 100-unit insulin syringe

⚠️Safety & Considerations

Approved in Russian Federation with extensive clinical use history. Available as intranasal spray and injection. Well tolerated — no significant side effects at therapeutic doses. Avoid in autoimmune conditions unless directed by immunologist. Standard course: 3-10 days intranasal or 3-10 days injection.

Interactions & Contraindications

Well tolerated. Intranasal spray form is OTC in Russia — excellent safety profile. Avoid in autoimmune conditions. Standard course: 3-10 days. Can be combined with conventional antibiotics/antivirals for infection management.

🔗Synergies & Common Stacks

Thymogen (mild thymic dipeptide, OTC) can serve as maintenance therapy between Thymosin Alpha-1 cycles (more potent, prescription-level) — graduated immune support.

Thymogen stimulates thymulin production from thymic epithelial cells — the two peptides are mechanistically linked, with Thymogen acting upstream to enhance endogenous thymulin secretion.

📊 Dosing Quick Reference

Thymogen— Dosing Guide
Dose Range
100-1000 mcg/day (intranasal or SC)
Half-Life
~20-30 minutes
Frequency
1× daily for 3-10 days
Route
Subcutaneous
1 mg vial5 mg vial
💧 1 mL BAC water📐 1 mg/mL concentration💉 10 mcg/unit (100u syringe)
Immune & Thymiccalcmypeptide.com

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Thymogen available as a nasal spray?
Yes — in Russia, Thymogen is available as an over-the-counter intranasal spray (25 mcg per spray). This is the most common form used for immune support during cold and flu season. The course is typically 3-10 days of 1-2 sprays per nostril daily.
How does Thymogen compare to Thymosin Alpha-1?
Both are thymic immunomodulators but differ in scope and potency. Thymosin Alpha-1 (28 amino acids) is more potent, used for hepatitis/cancer/critical illness, and has international clinical trial data. Thymogen (2 amino acids) is milder, used for general immune support, and is widely available in Russian pharmacies. They can complement each other in severe immunodeficiency.