Albumin is a Useful Marker of Organ Function and Tissue Damage

Aliyah Weinstein, Ph.D.

This typical standard curve was generated using the Mouse Albumin ELISA Kit Protocol. This standard curve is for demonstration only. A standard curve must be generated for each assay. Suggested standard curve points are 500 ng/ml, 167 ng/ml, 55.6 ng/ml, 18.5 ng/ml, 6.17 ng/ml, 2.06 ng/ml, 0.69 ng/ml, and 0 ng/ml.
Bethyl’s Mouse Albumin ELISA kit is a versatile reagent with applications in several molecular biology and biomedical research fields. This is because albumin, which is normally found in the blood, can be used as an indicator of organ function and tissue damage.

Albumin is a key protein for measuring the effects of kidney disease. When normal kidneys filter blood, albumin remains in the blood. When kidney damage occurs, this filter is unable to properly filter out albumin, which is then excreted in the urine - a symptom known as albuminuria - and can be measured and is used as a marker of kidney damage. The Mouse Albumin ELISA has been used to characterize causes of kidney damage: for example, in an experimental model of cast nephropathy, which commonly occurs in multiple myeloma patients, the presence of free immunoglobulin light chains caused kidney damage, as measured by an increase in the ratio of urine albumin to creatine, using ELISA1. This study further went on to describe a novel signaling pathway involving Stat1 that drives inflammation in this form of kidney disease.

The albumin found in blood is secreted by hepatocytes in the liver. Another study took advantage of this property to measure the functionality of 3D organoid cultures of hepatocytes2. The authors used Bethyl’s Mouse Albumin ELISA to measure the secretion of albumin from primary hepatocytes, hepatocyte organoids, and cholangiocyte organoids. They showed that the hepatocyte organoids secrete a similar amount of albumin to primary hepatocytes, whereas the cholangiocyte organoids - which are cells of the bile duct - do not secrete albumin, as expected.

The secretion of albumin by hepatocytes is also useful as a tool for characterizing the transdifferentiation of embryonic stem cells (ESC) into hepatocytes. Bethyl’s Mouse Albumin ELISA was used to measure albumin secretion from ESC overexpressing the Sox9 gene and cultured in hepatocyte-specific media, which showed that these cells secrete significantly higher levels of albumin than control ESC. These results indicate that Sox9 can enhance the differentiation of ESC into hepatocytes.

Since albumin is present in the blood, measurement of albumin in organs indicates tissue damage. For example, leakage of blood into the retina can cause vision loss and one cause of this is oxygen-induced retinopathy. Either adoptively-transferred T regulatory cells or an IL-2/anti-IL-2 antibody complex reduce vascular leakage, as measured by the presence of albumin in retina using the Mouse Albumin ELISA4. The extent of lung damage can also be measured by the presence of albumin in the tissue, specifically in the bronchial-alveolar lavage fluid (BALF)5. One study sought to determine the role of myeloid protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) in regulating lung injury, and used the Mouse Albumin ELISA to show that PP2A-deficient mice are more susceptible to lung damage based on a statistically significant increase in BALF compared to wild-type mice.

As you can see, Bethyl’s Mouse Albumin ELISA is a versatile tool in many different fields.


References

1. Ying W-Z, Li X, Rangarajan S, Feng W, Curtis LM, Sanders PW (2019) Immunoglobulin light chains generate proinflammatory and profibrotic kidney injury. Journal of Clinical Investigation 129:2792–2806 .

2. Hu H, Gehart H, Artegiani B, LÖpez-Iglesias C, Dekkers F, Basak O, van Es J, Chuva de Sousa Lopes SM, Begthel H, Korving J, van den Born M, Zou C, Quirk C, Chiriboga L, Rice CM, Ma S, Rios A, Peters PJ, de Jong YP, Clevers H (2018) Long-Term Expansion of Functional Mouse and Human Hepatocytes as 3D Organoids. Cell 175:1591-1606.e19.

3. Yamamizu K, Schlessinger D, Ko MSH (2014) SOX9 accelerates ESC differentiation to three germ layer lineages by repressing SOX2 expression through P21 (WAF1/CIP1). Development 141:4254–4266.

4. Deliyanti D, Talia DM, Zhu T, Maxwell MJ, Agrotis A, Jerome JR, Hargreaves EM, Gerondakis S, Hibbs ML, Mackay F, Wilkinson-Berka JL (2017) Foxp3+ Tregs are recruited to the retina to repair pathological angiogenesis. Nat Commun 8:.

5. Sun L, Hult EM, Cornell TT, Kim KK, Shanley TP, Wilke CA, Agarwal M, Gurczynski SJ, Moore BB, Dahmer MK (2019) Loss of myeloid-specific protein phosphatase 2A enhances lung injury and fibrosis and results in IL-10-dependent sensitization of epithelial cell apoptosis. American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology 316:L1035–L1048.