| Field | Specification |
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| Alternative Names | UT-A1, UT-A2, UT1, UT2, UTA, UTA1, UT2_HUMAN, UT2, UTR, SLC14A2, Slc14a2, Solute carrier family 14 member 2, Solute carrier family 14 (urea transporter) member 2, Urea transporter, Urea transporter 2, Urea transporter kidney, HUT2, hUT-A6, FLJ16167, MGC119566, MGC119567, kidney |
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| Immunogen | Produced against a synthetic peptide mapped to the C-terminal tail (amino acids 911-929) of rat UT-A1 (antibody designation L194) |
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UT-A1 (Urea Transporter A1), encoded by the SLC14A2 gene, is a membrane-bound protein primarily expressed in the kidney, where it plays a critical role in urea reabsorption and osmoregulation. While traditionally studied in renal physiology, emerging interest in systemic metabolic regulation and brain-kidney axis signaling has prompted investigation into UT-A1’s potential roles beyond the kidney.
Recent studies suggest that altered urea metabolism and systemic nitrogen imbalance may contribute to neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative processes. Elevated brain urea levels have been observed in disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and Huntington’s disease, implicating dysregulated urea handling in neuronal dysfunction. Although UT-A1 expression in the central nervous system remains limited, its systemic influence on urea clearance and osmotic balance may indirectly affect brain homeostasis.
Understanding UT-A1’s regulatory mechanisms and its interaction with other solute transporters could provide new insights into metabolic contributions to neurodegeneration. As research into the gut-brain and kidney-brain axes expands, UT-A1 may emerge as a peripheral biomarker or therapeutic target in the broader landscape of neurodegenerative disease research.
1 µg/ml of SPC-406 was sufficient for detection of UT-A1 in 20 µg of rat kidney tissue lysate by colorimetric immunoblot analysis using Goat anti-rabbit IgG:HRP as the secondary antibody.
Cite this product varies by variant:
- SPC-406D — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D, RRID: AB_10645648)
- SPC-406D-A390 — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: ATTO 390 (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-A390, RRID: AB_2704590)
- SPC-406D-A488 — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: ATTO 488 (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-A488, RRID: AB_2704591)
- SPC-406D-A594 — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: ATTO 594 (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-A594, RRID: AB_2704593)
- SPC-406D-APC — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: APC (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-APC, RRID: AB_2704599)
- SPC-406D-BI — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: Biotin (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-BI, RRID: AB_2704600)
- SPC-406D-FITC — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: FITC (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-FITC, RRID: AB_2704601)
- SPC-406D-HRP — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: HRP (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-HRP, RRID: AB_2704602)
- SPC-406D-PCP — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: PerCP (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-PCP, RRID: AB_2704604)
- SPC-406D-RPE — Size: 100 ug: UT-A1 Antibody: RPE (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406D-RPE, RRID: AB_2704605)
- SPC-406S — Size: 12 ug: UT-A1 Antibody (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA, Catalog# SPC-406S, RRID: AB_10645648)
Customization & Add-ons: Can’t find the antibody you need—or require a custom format for your assay? We can help you source the best match or support custom antibody solutions for diverse research needs, including species and isotype selection, conjugations and labeling (e.g., HRP/AP, biotin, fluorophores), purification grade options (Protein A/G, affinity purified), formulation preferences (buffer selection, carrier-free, glycerol-free), custom concentrations and aliquoting, low-endotoxin options for cell-based work, and application-focused QC/validation support (project dependent). Click Talk to a Scientist to submit a request, email us at support@biohippo.com, or explore our Research Services for additional support—our team will follow up with feasibility details and next steps.
2. Smith C.P. (2009) Exp Physiol. 94(2): 180-185.