Kristagen

Kristagen is a complex peptide bioregulator preparation derived from thymus tissue, developed to support immune function and T-cell-mediated immunity. Research focuses on its potential for countering thymic involution, restoring age-related immune decline, and supporting T-cell differentiation through tissue-specific peptide signaling.

Kristagen is a complex peptide preparation classified as a cytomedine — a tissue-specific bioregulator developed at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology under Vladimir Khavinson's research program.

Overview

The thymus is the central organ of adaptive immunity, responsible for T-cell maturation, selection, and education. It undergoes progressive involution beginning around puberty, shrinking in size and replacing functional thymic epithelium with adipose tissue. This thymic involution is a major driver of immunosenescence — the age-related decline in immune function that increases susceptibility to infections, reduces vaccine efficacy, and impairs cancer immunosurveillance.

Kristagen was developed to address thymic involution through the cytomedine approach established by Khavinson, which holds that tissue-derived peptide extracts can reactivate gene expression in aging cells (Khavinson, 2005). The preparation is produced by standardized extraction of low-molecular-weight peptides from animal thymus tissue. It sits within a broader family of thymus-targeting agents in the Khavinson system: Thymalin is the original injectable cytomedine with the most extensive clinical history, Vladonix is another oral thymic bioregulator, and Vilon (Lys-Glu) is a synthetic dipeptide with thymus-modulating properties.

Mechanism of Action

Kristagen's proposed mechanism targets the thymic microenvironment through multiple pathways mediated by its complex peptide composition:

  • Thymic epithelial cell support through upregulation of genes involved in the maintenance of cortical and medullary thymic epithelium, the cellular scaffold essential for T-cell development
  • T-cell differentiation by modulating the expression of factors required for thymocyte selection, including those involved in positive and negative selection processes that ensure a functional, self-tolerant T-cell repertoire
  • Anti-involution effects through counteracting the adipogenic conversion of thymic stroma, potentially slowing or partially reversing the replacement of functional thymic tissue with fat
  • Cytokine modulation by normalizing the production of thymic hormones and cytokines (including IL-7, a critical factor for T-cell development and survival) in the aging thymic environment

The immunomodulatory effects of thymic peptide bioregulators have been established through decades of research on Thymalin. Khavinson's foundational work demonstrated that thymic peptides can restore immune parameters in aging organisms, improving T-cell counts, normalizing CD4/CD8 ratios, and enhancing immune responsiveness (Khavinson, 2005). Kristagen is designed to provide similar effects in an oral format through its complex peptide mixture.

The general mechanism of peptide-DNA interaction that underlies all cytomedines has been reviewed systematically, confirming that short peptides can bind to specific DNA sequences and modulate transcription in a tissue-selective manner (Khavinson et al., 2021).

Reconstitution Calculator

Reconstitution Calculator

Calculate your peptide dosing

Draw Volume
0.100mL
Syringe Units
10units
Concentration
2,500mcg/mL
Doses / Vial
20doses
Vial Total
5mg
Waste / Vial
0mcg
Syringe Cap.
100units · 1mL
How to reconstitute
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1.Wash hands thoroughly, put on disposable gloves
2.Your 5mg peptide vial (lyophilized powder)
3.Bacteriostatic water (you'll need 2mL)
4.A 3–5mL syringe with 21–25 gauge needle for reconstitution
5.Alcohol swabs (70% isopropyl)
Use bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol) for multi-dose vials. Sterile water is only safe for single-use.
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Store 2-8°C30 day shelf lifeSwirl gentlyFor research purposes only

Research

Geroprotection and Longevity

Thymic bioregulators hold a central position in Khavinson's geroprotective approach because immune decline underlies many age-related pathologies. Impaired immunosurveillance contributes to cancer development, chronic infections drive systemic inflammation, and reduced immune regulation promotes autoimmune phenomena common in the elderly. By targeting the thymus, preparations like Kristagen aim to address a root cause of multiple aging manifestations rather than treating individual symptoms.

T-Cell Function and Immunomodulation

Beyond thymic regeneration, Kristagen is investigated for its potential to modulate peripheral T-cell function. Aging T-cells exhibit multiple functional defects including reduced proliferative capacity, impaired cytokine production, and increased expression of senescence markers. Bioregulatory peptides have been shown to modulate gene expression in aging cell cultures, with effects on key regulators including FOXO1 and TERT (Ashapkin et al., 2020), both of which play roles in T-cell homeostasis and function.

The tissue-specific stimulation of cell differentiation during aging, demonstrated across the cytomedine class (Khavinson et al., 2012), is particularly relevant to thymic biology where the differentiation of thymocytes into mature T-cells is the organ's primary function.

Thymic Involution and Immune Aging

Thymic involution is one of the most significant and earliest aging processes in the human body. By age 50, thymic output of naive T-cells has declined dramatically, leading to a contracted T-cell receptor repertoire and increased reliance on memory T-cells. This shift compromises the immune system's ability to respond to novel pathogens and reduces vaccine efficacy.

Khavinson's research program has produced some of the most extensive data on peptide-based thymic regeneration. Long-term studies using Thymalin in elderly populations demonstrated improvements in immune parameters, reduced infection rates, and increased survival — findings that established the foundation for developing oral preparations like Kristagen. Khavinson's comprehensive review of peptides and aging (Khavinson, 2005) documented these findings across multiple clinical observations.

Safety Profile

Kristagen has a safety profile consistent with other thymic cytomedine preparations, which have the longest clinical history of any bioregulatory peptide class. Thymalin, the injectable thymic cytomedine, has been used in Russian clinical practice since the 1970s with an extensive safety record. As an oral preparation of naturally occurring low-molecular-weight peptides, Kristagen is rapidly metabolized through normal proteolytic pathways.

Formal toxicology studies and controlled clinical trials for Kristagen specifically in international peer-reviewed journals remain limited. Individuals with autoimmune conditions should use caution, as stimulation of thymic function could theoretically alter the balance between immune activation and tolerance. Similarly, patients with T-cell lymphomas or leukemias should avoid thymic bioregulators until their effects on malignant lymphocytes are clarified.

Pharmacokinetic Profile

Half-life
Not established

Quick Start

Route
Oral

Molecular Structure

Molecular Properties
Formula
Not applicable (polypeptide complex)
CAS
Not available

Research Protocols

oral

It sits within a broader family of thymus-targeting agents in the Khavinson system: Thymalin is the original injectable cytomedine with the most extensive clinical history, Vladonix is another oral thymic bioregulator, and Vilon (Lys-Glu) is a synthetic dipeptide with thymus-modulating properties. K

Quality Indicators

What to look for

  • Human clinical trials conducted
  • Naturally occurring compound
  • Multiple peer-reviewed studies available

Frequently Asked Questions

References (4)

  1. [2]
    [Khavinson VK et al. (2012). Peptides tissue-specifically stimulate cell differentiation during their aging. Bull Exp Biol Med (2012)
  2. [3]
  3. [4]
    [Khavinson VK et al. (2021). Peptide Regulation of Gene Expression: A Systematic Review. Molecules (2021)
  4. [1]
    [Khavinson VK (2005). Peptides and ageing. Neuro Endocrinol Lett (2005)
Updated 2026-03-08Reviewed by Tides Research Team4 citationsSources: peptide-wiki-mdx, peptide-wiki-mdx-v2

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