Rat NGAL ELISA Kit
Cat.No. KIT 046
96 wells – 40 tests in duplicate
<4 hours
Quantitative (pg/mL)
For Research Use Only.
An ELISA for the in vitro determination of rat NGAL in urine, serum, plasma, tissue extracts or culture media.
BioPorto Diagnostics proudly introduces a new Rat NGAL ELISA Kit replacing KIT 041
Since the first rat NGAL ELISA reached market in 2008, accumulated knowledge and continued developments have led to improvements of the assay performance. The name of the assay remains Rat NGAL ELISA kit, but with the improvements on the general assay performance BioPorto Diagnostics also introduces a new product number for the Rat NGAL ELISA Kit - KIT 046.
Featured changes in Rat NGAL ELISA Kit (KIT 046):
- Improved sensitivity - higher sensitivity allowing better discrimination between samples
- Improved calibration - metric values readout (pg/mL)
- Improved linearity - better sample dilution linearity
Rat NGAL - a biomarker of nephrotoxicity in drug development
Early kidney injury detection has been long sought and NGAL has recently been shown to be the biomarker that could fill this diagnostic gap. Measured from baseline, NGAL levels rise significantly in both urine and blood as a response to kidney injury – nephrotoxic, ischemic or otherwise.
Applicability
The Rat NGAL ELISA Kit allows for the determination of rises in rat NGAL concentrations and hence the extent of renal injury, including nephrotoxic injury. For example in the following phases of drug development:
- Discovery
- Research and development
- Pre-clinical phase
Kit features
- Simple ELISA format - easy to perform
- Ready-to-use calibrators and working solutions
- Pre-coated 96-well ELISA plate
- All incubations performed at room temperature
- Easy storage
- All components are stored at 4°C
- Automation possible on open ELISA workstations
For Scientific references, please download the flyer from the right-hand menu.
For learning more about NGAL, please read the full versions of the articles below:
Emerging biomarkers for Acute Kidney Injury
NGAL: the new marker for kidney damage - just how good is it?

