3zpm Citations

The structure of latherin, a surfactant allergen protein from horse sweat and saliva.

OpenAccess logo J R Soc Interface 10 20130453 (2013)
Cited: 24 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 23782536

Abstract

Latherin is a highly surface-active allergen protein found in the sweat and saliva of horses and other equids. Its surfactant activity is intrinsic to the protein in its native form, and is manifest without associated lipids or glycosylation. Latherin probably functions as a wetting agent in evaporative cooling in horses, but it may also assist in mastication of fibrous food as well as inhibition of microbial biofilms. It is a member of the PLUNC family of proteins abundant in the oral cavity and saliva of mammals, one of which has also been shown to be a surfactant and capable of disrupting microbial biofilms. How these proteins work as surfactants while remaining soluble and cell membrane-compatible is not known. Nor have their structures previously been reported. We have used protein nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to determine the conformation and dynamics of latherin in aqueous solution. The protein is a monomer in solution with a slightly curved cylindrical structure exhibiting a 'super-roll' motif comprising a four-stranded anti-parallel β-sheet and two opposing α-helices which twist along the long axis of the cylinder. One end of the molecule has prominent, flexible loops that contain a number of apolar amino acid side chains. This, together with previous biophysical observations, leads us to a plausible mechanism for surfactant activity in which the molecule is first localized to the non-polar interface via these loops, and then unfolds and flattens to expose its hydrophobic interior to the air or non-polar surface. Intrinsically surface-active proteins are relatively rare in nature, and this is the first structure of such a protein from mammals to be reported. Both its conformation and proposed method of action are different from other, non-mammalian surfactant proteins investigated so far.

Reviews - 3zpm mentioned but not cited (1)

  1. The Diverse Structures and Functions of Surfactant Proteins. Schor M, Reid JL, MacPhee CE, Stanley-Wall NR. Trends Biochem Sci 41 610-620 (2016)

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  2. 100 Years later: Celebrating the contributions of x-ray crystallography to allergy and clinical immunology. Pomés A, Chruszcz M, Gustchina A, Minor W, Mueller GA, Pedersen LC, Wlodawer A, Chapman MD. J Allergy Clin Immunol 136 29-37.e10 (2015)
  3. Respiratory Allergens from Furred Mammals: Environmental and Occupational Exposure. Zahradnik E, Raulf M. Vet Sci 4 E38 (2017)
  4. Lipophilic Allergens, Different Modes of Allergen-Lipid Interaction and Their Impact on Asthma and Allergy. Jappe U, Schwager C, Schromm AB, González Roldán N, Stein K, Heine H, Duda KA. Front Immunol 10 122 (2019)
  5. Molecular Characteristics and Biological Functions of Surface-Active and Surfactant Proteins. Sunde M, Pham CLL, Kwan AH. Annu Rev Biochem 86 585-608 (2017)
  6. Animal thermoregulation: a review of insulation, physiology and behaviour relevant to temperature control in buildings. McCafferty DJ, Pandraud G, Gilles J, Fabra-Puchol M, Henry PY. Bioinspir Biomim 13 011001 (2017)

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