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Research areas/Immune & Inflammation
Research area · 4 peptides

Immune & Inflammation

Thymic and host-defense peptides studied for immune modulation.

Overview

Immunoactive peptides are studied for their ability to modulate both innate and adaptive immunity — restoring T-cell function, regulating cytokine balance, and providing direct antimicrobial activity. The class includes thymic peptides, host-defense (antimicrobial) peptides, and short anti-inflammatory fragments.

Research contexts span chronic viral infection, sepsis and oncology adjunct settings, antimicrobial-resistance models, and inflammatory conditions such as IBD and atopic dermatitis. Host-defense peptides are of particular interest as the antibiotic-resistance crisis renews attention on innate-immune mechanisms.

Peptides studied in immune & inflammation

Frequently asked questions

How do immunoactive peptides work?+

They’re studied to modulate innate and adaptive immunity — restoring T-cell function, balancing cytokines, and in some cases acting directly as antimicrobials.

What are host-defense peptides?+

Antimicrobial (host-defense) peptides are part of innate immunity and draw renewed research interest as antibiotic resistance grows.

What conditions appear in this research?+

Contexts span chronic viral infection, sepsis and oncology adjunct settings, antimicrobial-resistance models, and inflammatory conditions like IBD and atopic dermatitis.

Understand the evidence

How to weigh this evidence

Preclinical, observational, and randomized findings carry very different weight. The evidence hierarchy shows how to rank what you read before drawing conclusions.

Hands-on tools

Put the science to work — interactive utilities that run right here.

Peptide Agent

Ask the Agent about Immune & Inflammation

Which peptides are best studied for immune & inflammation, how they compare, and what the clinical evidence shows — citation-backed answers grounded in PubMed, PubChem, and ClinicalTrials.gov.