(Press-News.org) Since the COVID-19 pandemic, global interest in antiviral therapies has increased significantly. Recently, with the growing attention to peptide-based drugs such as Wegovy, demand for effective peptide therapeutics derived from natural substances is rapidly rising. In particular, peptide metabolites—which are generated when natural proteins break down in the body—are emerging as promising candidates for multifunctional drug development.
A research team from the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST, President Oh Sang-Rok), led by Dr. Hyung-Seop Han from the Biomaterials Research Center, Dr. Dae-Geun Song from the Center for Natural Product Systems Biology, and Dr. Oh-Seung Kwon from the Doping Control Center, announced that they have developed a therapeutic substance with both antiviral and tissue regenerative properties, based on a peptide derived from natural sources.
The team revealed that a peptide metabolite (Ac-Tβ1-17), produced from the breakdown of a natural protein (thymosin β4) present in the human body, functions as a bioactive molecule capable of both antiviral activity and tissue regeneration. The peptide metabolite (Ac-Tβ1-17) discovered by the team inhibited the activity of Mpro, a key protease of the COVID-19 virus, by over 85%, demonstrating strong antiviral effects. In experiments using human vascular cells, it also activated key processes essential for recovery, including cell growth, wound healing, blood vessel formation, and removal of reactive oxygen species.
To apply the excellent biological functions of Ac-Tβ1-17 in actual therapy, the research team fabricated a supporting scaffold using the peptide. Scaffolds serve as structural platforms for cell growth or tissue repair and play an important role in regenerative medicine. This peptide scaffold was found to be highly effective in promoting tissue recovery, supporting strong cell adhesion, growth, and blood vessel formation.
This study confirms that a single peptide can perform both antiviral and regenerative functions, and is expected to overcome limitations of existing protein-based therapies. Moreover, by focusing on the potential of metabolites generated from protein degradation in the body, the study offers a valuable technological foundation for developing both new drugs and medical biomaterials. The research team plans to continue research on the practical application of Ac-Tβ1-17 in customized therapeutics and regenerative biomaterials.
Dr. Han of KIST stated, “This study demonstrates that protein metabolites can be used not only as new drugs but also as biomaterials for tissue regeneration, confirming their potential for expansion into various biomedical applications.” Dr. Song said, “We will continue research using natural bioactive materials to pursue practical applications in antivirals, functional biomaterials, and beyond.” Dr. Kwon added, “The metabolite of thymosin β4 has been identified as a drug candidate through collaborative research, and we expect it to be widely applicable in this field moving forward.”
###
KIST was established in 1966 as the first government-funded research institute in Korea. KIST now strives to solve national and social challenges and secure growth engines through leading and innovative research. For more information, please visit KIST’s website at https://www.kist.re.kr/eng/index.do
This research was supported by the Ministry of Science and ICT (Minister Sang Im Yoo) through KIST's major project and the Global Research Network Program (NRF-2021K1A3A1A74095929). The results of this study were published in the international journal Bioactive Materials (IF 18.0, JCR ranking 0.9%).
END
KIST develops multifunctional peptide that fights viruses and promotes wound healing
Development of a peptide derived from natural protein metabolites with both antiviral and tissue regenerative functions
2025-05-28
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Potential to prevent and treat a common type of inflammatory arthritis advanced by the identification of new genetic links
2025-05-28
Philadelphia, May 28, 2025 – In a first-of-its-kind genome-wide association study (GWAS) researchers have discovered two genes, RNF144B and ENPP1, that cause calcium pyrophosphate deposition (CPPD) disease in Americans of European and African descent. This crystalline arthritis is caused by calcium pyrophosphate (CPP) crystal deposition in joints. The findings of this novel study in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, published by Elsevier, open up promising new avenues for targeted prevention and treatment of CPPD disease, which are currently lacking.
Characterized by the deposition of CPP crystals in articular ...
Researchers identify key symptoms of long COVID in young children
2025-05-28
Long COVID—symptoms that linger long after initial viral infection—can affect people of every age, including children. But the lasting symptoms in an infant, toddler, or pre-school-aged child may be different than symptoms in adults and older children. A new study conducted by researchers at Mass General Brigham and their colleagues as part of the federally funded RECOVER initiative examined the most common long COVID symptoms in young children, finding that infants and toddlers (younger than 2 years old) were more likely to experience trouble sleeping, fussiness, poor appetite, ...
Children and young people are waiting longer than necessary for cancer diagnosis, according to new research
2025-05-28
Dr Shanmugavadivel said: “For the first time, we understand the current landscape of childhood cancer diagnosis in the UK. We can celebrate that ethnicity, sex and socioeconomic status have no impact on time to diagnosis, but there is an urgent need to focus efforts on young people and tumour types such as bone tumours that are still experiencing lengthy intervals. Earliest possible diagnosis is key as time is crucial. Untreated, tumours grow bigger and can spread around the body, requiring more extensive surgery and more ...
Mental disorders, cardiovascular diseases, smoking, and road injuries among the top causes of death and disability for millions in the ASEAN region
2025-05-27
Mental disorders, cardiovascular diseases, smoking, and road injuries among the top causes of death and disability for millions in the ASEAN region
More than 80 million people in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have mental disorders, a 70% increase from 1990, burdening children, the elderly, and women the most.
37 million people in the region suffer from cardiovascular disease and 1.7 million die from it, making it one of the fastest growing non-communicable diseases and the leading cause of death.
The number of smokers has increased in every ASEAN country and by 63% to 137 million regionally, ...
One in three youth with mental health crisis spent over 12 hours in emergency department waiting for psychiatric bed
2025-05-27
Approximately one in three pediatric mental health Emergency Department (ED) visits resulting in admission or transfer exceeded 12 hours, and over one in eight exceeded 24 hours, according to estimates based on nationally representative data from 2018 to 2022. Seven in 10 of all kids staying in the ED over 12 hours were there for suicidal thoughts or attempt, and over half for aggressive behaviors. Findings were published in the Journal of American College of Emergency Physicians.
“Our study underscores significant issues with access to mental health care for children and adolescents, who often face prolonged ED stays ...
Rural location and racial segregation drive gaps in primary care access in Virginia
2025-05-27
Background and Goal: This study aimed to identify geographic disparities of the primary care workforce in Virginia and factors associated with primary care physician (PCP) access.
Study Approach: Researchers used the 2019 Virginia All-Payers Claims Database to identify PCPs and the number of patients seen by each physician. They then measured how many PCPs each census tract could reach within a 30‑minute drive, flagging tracts with too few as having poor access. Researchers then assessed associations between PCP access and predisposing (age, race), ...
AHRQ’s National Center for Excellence in Primary Care Research (NCEPCR) consolidates primary care research
2025-05-27
Background and Goal: For more than two decades, support from the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality (AHRQ) for primary care research was dispersed across multiple centers, making it difficult to view the work as a unified effort. In 2022, the National Center for Excellence in Primary Care Research (NCEPCR) was funded to act as the home for primary care research at AHRQ. This special report aims to increase awareness of AHRQ’s NCEPCR among primary care clinicians, researchers, and partners.
Key Insights: NCEPCR aims to strengthen the nation’s primary care system by sponsoring research to generate ...
Decision involvement and trust shape seniors’ willingness to cut back prescriptions
2025-05-27
Background and Goal: This study explored older adults’ perspectives on proactive deprescribing, identified barriers and enablers, and developed a typology of patient attitudes to inform patient-centered deprescribing interventions.
Study Approach: In this qualitative study, researchers conducted semi structured interviews with 20 patients in Japan aged 65 years or older who were receiving 5 or more oral medications.
Main Results:
Enablers
Negative valuation of medication: patients noted pill burden, possible harm and past success in stopping drugs.
Proactive decision making preference: a few patients wanted an active role ...
Nonadherence labeling in primary care often results in poorer health outcome: ethical risks of diagnosing nonadherence
2025-05-27
Background and Theory overview: Promoting adherence to medical recommendations remains one of the oldest yet most persistent challenges of modern clinical practice. Traditional models treat nonadherence as an intrinsic patient behavior, which can undermine patients’ autonomy as well as blame them for poor health outcomes. The authors draw on sociological labeling theory to show that “nonadherent” is not a neutral clinical finding but a social judgment made by clinicians.
What Is New: The authors name and model “adherence labeling” as the process by which clinicians produce “nonadherence” data rather than diagnose a patient trait. ...
Patients and staff identify opportunities for artificial intelligence to improve primary care eVisits
2025-05-27
Background and Goal: While remote or electronic visits (eVisits) can increase access to health care for certain groups of patients, their use can increase staff workload and patient demand. Artificial intelligence (AI) may mitigate these outcomes. This study explored the views of staff and patients in primary care to inform the development of artificial intelligence (AI) features for eVisits.
Study Approach: Researchers conducted interviews and focus groups with 16 primary care staff and 37 patients from 14 ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Feeling mental exhaustion? These two areas of the brain may control whether people give up or persevere
Genomes from people across modern-day India shed light on 50,000 years of evolutionary history
Muscle in space sheds light on ageing-related muscle loss
Availability of medications for opioid use disorder in opioid treatment programs
Receipt of buprenorphine and naltrexone for opioid use disorder by race and ethnicity and insurance type
Scientists complete the most thorough analysis yet of India's genetic diversity
$50 million raised for UVA's Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology
From hydration layers to nanoarchitectures: Water’s pivotal role in peptide organization on 2D nanomaterials
Discovery of reduced α-synuclein in red blood cells of patients with dementia with lewy bodies
New system uses sound and terahertz waves to measure blood sodium without needles
IEEE study reveal the physics of laser emission from Mamyshev oscillator
CHEST launches critical care APP education and certification
Kelp-eating microalgae offer huge potential
Study challenges climate change's link to our wild winter jet stream
Study shows controlled burns can reduce wildfire intensity and smoke pollution
FAU Harbor Branch receives grant from Chef José Andrés’ Longer Tables Fund for queen conch lab aquaculture expansion
AERA selects James A. Banks to deliver 2025 Brown Lecture in Education Research
WSU-led study identifies associations between prenatal factors and childhood obesity
Researchers show AI art protection tools still leave creators at risk
Vegan diet improves dietary acid load, a key risk factor for diabetes, new study finds
Chicago’s rodents are evolving to handle city living
Uncovering the role of spacers in advancing portable, low-voltage OLEDs
Unraveling protein–nanoparticle interactions using biophysics
SLAS Technology Vol. 32: AI, Robotics and Precision Diagnostics
SLAS Discovery Volume 33 showcases new innovations in drug discovery
Poll: Amid multi-state measles outbreak, 79% of Americans support routine childhood vaccine requirements
Artificial intelligence in miniature format for small devices
Early blood-thinning treatment safe and effective for stroke patients
New gene therapy delivery device could let hospitals create personalized nanomedicines on-demand
Membrane or metabolism, which came first?
[Press-News.org] KIST develops multifunctional peptide that fights viruses and promotes wound healingDevelopment of a peptide derived from natural protein metabolites with both antiviral and tissue regenerative functions