Research Guide

TB-500 (Thymosin Beta-4):
Tissue Repair & Recovery Research

Thymosin Beta-4 (TB-500) is a naturally occurring 43-amino acid peptide and one of the most abundant intracellular peptides in mammalian cells. This guide covers its research history, proposed mechanisms, and key preclinical findings in tissue repair models.

Actin Sequestration
Angiogenesis Research
Anti-Inflammatory Models
Cardiac Studies
Overview

What Is TB-500?

TB-500 is a synthetic version of Thymosin Beta-4 (Tβ4), a ubiquitous 43-amino acid peptide first isolated from thymic tissue. It is one of the most abundant peptides in mammalian cells and plays a central role in G-actin sequestration — binding free actin monomers to regulate cytoskeletal dynamics. Its LKKTET motif (residues 17–23) is considered the pharmacologically active domain and has been the subject of independent research as a truncated fragment.

TB-500 has been investigated across a broad range of preclinical models including wound healing, cardiac injury, corneal repair, and neurological recovery. Lumen Peppers provides research-grade TB-500 individually and as part of the TB-500 + BPC-157 blend for combinatorial research protocols.

43
Amino Acids
LKKTET
Active Motif
≥99%
Research Purity
Broad
Research Scope
Preclinical Research

Key Research Findings

TB-500 has demonstrated consistent effects across multiple tissue repair and recovery models in peer-reviewed preclinical research.

🩹

Wound Healing Acceleration

Rodent excisional wound models show TB-500 significantly accelerates dermal repair through keratinocyte migration stimulation and fibroblast chemotaxis — effects attributed primarily to actin-mediated cytoskeletal remodeling at wound margins.

🫀

Cardiac Repair Research

Myocardial infarction models demonstrate TB-500 promotes cardiomyocyte survival, reduces infarct size, and stimulates progenitor cell migration to the injury site. Akt pathway activation and VEGF upregulation are proposed mechanisms.

🩸

Angiogenesis Promotion

TB-500 consistently promotes formation of new microvasculature in ischemic tissue models. VEGF receptor upregulation and endothelial cell migration via actin polymerization modulation are implicated in these findings.

👁️

Corneal Repair Studies

Topical and systemic TB-500 application in corneal injury models shows significantly accelerated epithelial healing. The peptide appears to promote limbal stem cell migration and differentiation in these studies.

🧠

Neurological Recovery

CNS injury models including stroke and traumatic brain injury show TB-500 reduces lesion volume, promotes neurogenesis in the subventricular zone, and improves functional recovery in behavioral assays.

🔥

Anti-Inflammatory Activity

Multiple models demonstrate TB-500 suppresses pro-inflammatory cytokine expression (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6) and modulates macrophage polarization toward an M2/reparative phenotype in wound and inflammatory models.

Molecular Biology

Proposed Mechanisms of Action

G-Actin Sequestration

TB-500's primary identified function is binding G-actin (monomeric actin) with high affinity, preventing polymerization and maintaining a dynamic actin pool. This regulates cell migration, morphology, and mechanosensing in virtually all cell types.

LKKTET Active Motif

The hexapeptide LKKTET (residues 17-23) is the actin-binding domain and retains significant biological activity as an isolated fragment. Studies show this motif is sufficient to promote wound healing and cell migration in multiple models.

Akt / PI3K Pathway

Cardiac and vascular studies indicate TB-500 activates the PI3K/Akt pro-survival pathway, promoting cardiomyocyte protection from apoptosis and stimulating endothelial progenitor cell recruitment to ischemic tissue.

VEGF Upregulation

TB-500 increases VEGF expression in multiple tissue types, driving angiogenesis. This is observed in wound healing, cardiac ischemia, and corneal repair models — often synergistically with co-administered compounds like BPC-157.

NF-κB Modulation

Anti-inflammatory effects are partially attributed to TB-500's inhibition of NF-κB nuclear translocation, reducing transcription of pro-inflammatory cytokines and shifting macrophage populations toward reparative phenotypes.

Research Scope

Active Research Applications

🩹

Dermal Wound Models

Full-thickness excisional wound models, burn injury studies, and diabetic wound healing research in rodents using subcutaneous and topical TB-500 administration protocols.

🫀

Cardiac Regeneration

Post-MI models investigating progenitor cell recruitment, cardiomyocyte protection, and scar tissue reduction with systemic TB-500 administration.

🦴

Musculoskeletal Repair

Tendon, ligament, and muscle injury models — often in combination with BPC-157 — investigating accelerated structural tissue recovery.

👁️

Ocular Surface Research

Corneal epithelial defect models, dry eye syndrome studies, and limbal stem cell migration research using topical TB-500 preparations.

🧠

Neurological Models

Stroke, TBI, and spinal cord injury models examining TB-500's effects on neurogenesis, axonal sprouting, and functional behavioral recovery.

🔬

In Vitro Migration Assays

Scratch assay and Boyden chamber studies in fibroblast, keratinocyte, and endothelial cell lines to characterize the direct migratory effects of TB-500 and its active fragments.

Laboratory Reference

Protocol Notes for Researchers

Molecular Weight
4,963.5 Da
43-amino acid peptide. CAS: 77591-33-4. Sequence: SDKPDMAEIEKFDKSKLKKTETET. Lyophilized white powder.
Reconstitution
BAC Water
Add bacteriostatic water slowly to lyophilized powder. Target: 1 mg/mL stock. Swirl gently — do not vortex. Allow 5 min for complete dissolution.
Research Doses
2.5–7.5 mg/kg
Rodent wound healing models commonly use 2–10 mg/kg subcutaneous. Cardiac models typically administer at 6 mg/kg post-MI. Consult published literature for route-specific protocols.
Storage (lyoph.)
-20°C / 2 Yr
Store at -20°C, desiccated, protected from light. Stable for 24 months. Do not expose to repeated freeze-thaw cycles before reconstitution.
Reconstituted
4°C / 4 Wk
After reconstitution, store at 2–8°C. Use within 28 days. For long-term storage: aliquot into single-use volumes at -80°C.
Purity (Lumen)
≥99% HPLC
Independently third-party HPLC verified. Certificate of Analysis available on the product page.
Combinatorial Research

TB-500 + BPC-157 Synergy

TB-500 and BPC-157 are frequently co-administered in preclinical research due to their complementary mechanisms: TB-500 drives actin-mediated cell migration while BPC-157 activates FAK-paxillin and VEGFR2 pathways. Lumen Peppers offers a pre-blended research formulation for convenience.

Available at Lumen Peppers

TB-500 — Research Grade ≥99% Purity

Research-grade purity ≥99% · Third-party HPLC verified · Ships from the U.S.

RESEARCH USE ONLY — NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION
All products sold by Lumen Peppers are intended exclusively for in vitro laboratory research and investigative purposes. These compounds are not approved by the FDA for human or veterinary use. They are not drugs, supplements, or medications. Lumen Peppers makes no therapeutic claims. Researchers are solely responsible for ensuring compliance with all applicable laws and regulations in their jurisdiction.