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Organic Anion Transporting
polypeptides (OATP, Oatp1-3, LST-1, and PGT) Antibodies
Mammalian kidney and liver are critical in maintaining
physiological ionic environment. Kidney specializes in removing toxins,
drugs, and other organic anions from the blood by a process called "renal
secretion". Besides kidney, anionic substrates are also transported in other
organs, e.g., choroid plexus, eye, airway, and placenta. Brain possesses two
physiological barriers, namely blood-brain barrier (BBB) and
blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCSFB) which restrict entry of various
compounds. Therefore, specialized proteins or transporters must reside at
the basolateral and apical membranes that can transport various organic
solutes against the gradient (active transport). The major, known renal
secretory transport systems are multispecific and have been placed into two
distinct groups: the organic anion transporter (OAT)
and organic cation transporter (OCT).
Several multispecific OATs
(OAT1-3, OAT-K1 and OATK2) and
OATPs (organic anion transporting polypeptides;
oatp1-3),
have been cloned and characterized from various tissues. OATPs family of
proteins display high degree of sequence homology, and a general secondary
protein structure (up to 12 transmembrane domains with cytoplasmic N and
C-terminus).
Rat Oatp, now called
oatp1, encodes
a protein of 670 aa. Oatp1 was localized at the apical portions of the S3
segment of the proximal tubule, and at the apical surface of the choroid
plexus of rat brain. It is also found in liver, lung, skeletal muscle, and
colon. It mediates Na+-independent uptake of wide range of amphipathic
substrates including sulfobromopthalein (BSP), bile acids, estrogen
conjugates, and neutral steroids, etc.. Human liver
OATP (670 aa)
is only 67% homologous with rat oatp1. It differs in functional properties
from rat oatp1 and highly expressed in brain.
Oatp2 (also
called OATP-B1; 661 aa; 12 TM), cloned from rat brain, shares significant
homology with rat oatp1 and OAT-K1 (77%) and human OATP (73%). It is highly
expressed in brain, liver, and kidney but not in heart, spleen, lung,
muscle, and testes. Oatp2 mediates uptake of taurocholate, estrogen
conjugates, and cardiac glycosides ouabain. Unlike other oatps, oatp2 also
transported digioxin.
Oatp3 (670
aa; 12 TM), cloned from rat retina, shares ~80-83% identity with oatp1-2 and
~77% to rat OAT-K1. Oatp3 is highly expressed in the kidney, and moderately
in the retina. Oatp3 mediates uptake of taurocholate, thyroxine, and
triiodothyronine. Most of the T4 secreted from the thyroid is deiodinated in
peripheral tissues. The liver and kidney are the major sites for the
production of T3 and T4. Therefore, oatp3 may play a critical role in
transporting thyroid hormones from the circulation to the deiodination sites
in the kidney.
Prostaglandins and thromboxanes play important
physiological, pathological, and therapeutical roles in health and disease.
PGT
(prostaglandin transporter also known as martin F/G), a member of oatp
family, mediates transport of PGs (PGD2, PGE1, PGE2, PGF2a) from the
circulation. PGT (rat/human 643 aa; 12 TM) is expressed in brain, stomach,
ileum, jejunum, and kidney but not in heart or skeletal muscle.
Most recently, a
novel liver-specific OAT, LST-1,
has been cloned from human liver. It has also been detected in mouse and rat
liver. No significant expression of LST-1 was detected in other tissues.
Human LST-1 (691 aa, 12 TM) shares 42% homology with human OATP, rat
oatp1-3, and OATK-1, and 35% with PGT. Phylogenetic analyses places LST-1
between oatp and PGT. LST-1 has wide substrate specificity (taurocholate,
conjugated steroids, PGE2, Thromboxane B2, leukotrienes, and T3). Therefore,
LST-1 may be more important for clearance of bile acids and organic anions
in liver.
ADI has produced highly specific rabbit antibodies for
human OATP, oatp1-3, PGT, and LST-1 using antigenic peptide sequences unique
to each protein. These antibodies do not crossreact with each other and can
be used to study various transporters. Respective antigenic or control
peptides are also available to confirm specificity of antibodies.
|
Items |
Antigen peptide
location |
Antibody Host |
Ab
Crossreactivity |
Neat Antisera Cat
#
(100 ul) |
Aff. Pure Ab
Cat #
(100 ug) |
* Control
Peptide Cat#
(100 ug) |
|
OATP |
H, 15 aa, ~CT |
Rb |
H |
OATPH12-S |
OATPH12-A |
OATPH12-P |
|
OATP1 |
R, 17 aa, ~I |
Rb |
R |
OATP11-S |
OATP11-A |
OATP11-P |
|
OATP2 |
R, 12 aa, ~CT |
Rb |
R |
OATP21-S |
OATP21-A |
OATP21-P |
|
OATP3 |
R, 12 aa, ~I |
Rb |
R |
OATP32-S |
OATP32-A |
OATP32-P |
|
PGT |
R, 19 aa, ~NT |
Rb |
R, H |
PGT11-S |
PGT11-A |
PGT11-P |
|
LST-1 |
H, 17 aa, ~CT |
Rb |
H |
LST11-S |
LST11-A |
LST11-P |
m=mouse; r=rat; h=human; ch=chicken;
f=frog; ~CT or ~NT=near C or N-terminus. EC=Extracellular;
CP=Cytoplasmic domain;
"Neat Antisera" are the
unpurified antiserum and it is suitable for ELISA and
Western.
"Affinity pure"
antibodies have been over the antigen-affinity column
and recommended for immunohistochemical applications.
"Control peptides" can
not be used for Western as they are very short peptides.
They are intended for ELISA or antibody competition studies. |