Urocanic acid is found in animal sweat and skin. its concentration varies greatly between people, from 4 nM per cm2 to 34 nM per cm2 with only small differences between areas other than at the sole of the foot and between sun-exposed and unexposed areas. Concentration does not link with age, sex, skin tone, photosensitivity, and stratum corneum thickness. Among other functions, urocanic acid acts as an endogenous sunscreen or photoprotectant against
UVB-induced DNA damage. However, some studies have questioned this. The cis form is known to activate
regulatory T cells. Measuring cis-UCA provides a sensitive means at sub-erythemal doses to detect UVB, and so offers a potential method to assess the UVR protection provided by
suncreams. Some studies attribute filaggrin an important role in keeping the skin surface slightly acidic, through a breaking down mechanism to form histidine and subsequently trans-urocanic acid, however others have shown that the filaggrin–histidine–urocanic acid cascade is not essential for skin acidification. ==History==