| Field | Specification |
|---|---|
| Mfr No | |
| Alternative Names | Serum amyloid A-1 protein|SAA|Amyloid protein A|Amyloid fibril protein AA|Serum amyloid protein A(2-104|Serum amyloid protein A(3-104|Serum amyloid protein A(2-103|Serum amyloid protein A(2-102|Serum amyloid protein A(4-101|SAA1 |
| Assay Time | |
| Detection Method | |
| Detection Range | |
| Product Type | |
| Reactivity | |
| Sample Type(s) | Serum, Plasma, Cell Culture Supernatant, cell or tissue lysate, Other liquid samples |
| Sensitivity | |
| Species | |
| Storage | |
| Target | |
| UniProt # |
Background
human SAA (Serum Amyloid A) is a molecular target commonly studied in immunology, cancer, and cell division and proliferation research. Many proteins are studied as molecular readouts that can change with cellular state, tissue remodeling, or stress responses.
Biological role and mechanism
The biological role of SAA is typically understood in terms of its molecular category and interaction network. Depending on the model system, it may participate in cell–cell communication, intracellular signaling, enzymatic processing, or regulation of gene expression programs. Mechanistic interpretation is often strengthened by considering upstream regulators and downstream readouts rather than relying on a single marker.
Expression and abundance of SAA can vary by tissue, cell type, and physiological state. In many systems, levels are influenced by factors such as developmental stage, immune activation, metabolic status, and cellular stress. Because sample matrix and pre-analytical handling can affect measured concentrations, interpretation is typically strongest when experiments keep collection and processing consistent across groups.
Nomenclature and related terms
SAA (Serum Amyloid A) may also be referenced as Serum amyloid A-1 protein, SAA, and Amyloid protein A in the literature or in databases. When comparing results across studies, confirm that the reported analyte refers to the same molecule, species context, and molecular form (e.g., precursor vs mature protein, or soluble vs membrane-associated forms).
Why it matters in research
- Understanding how SAA relates to innate and adaptive immune responses, cytokine signaling networks, host–pathogen interactions, and immune cell activation and trafficking in immunology, cancer, and cell division and proliferation research.
- Interpreting shifts in SAA levels alongside other pathway components or complementary markers.
- Connecting molecular changes to phenotypes such as inflammation, remodeling, metabolism shifts, or cell-state transitions (context-dependent).
Molecular forms and interpretation
For some targets, isoforms, proteolytic processing, or post-translational modifications (such as phosphorylation or glycosylation) can influence function and apparent abundance. If multiple molecular forms are expected in your model, align interpretation with the form most relevant to the biological question.
Disease and translational relevance
SAA has been investigated across diverse physiological and disease contexts, and changes in its abundance have been reported in areas aligned with immunology, cancer, and cell division and proliferation studies. These associations are interpreted as research findings rather than diagnostic or therapeutic claims, and they should be evaluated alongside model-specific covariates and study design.
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