204 Pages 45 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Less than a decade has elapsed since the publication in 2000 of the first anthology devoted to lipocalins (Biochim Biophys Acta 1482, 2000), and only a few years since the first Lipocalin International Symposium in Copenhagen in 2003 (Benzon Symposium no. 50 “The Lipocalin Protein Superfamily,” Copenhagen, 2003) and the introduction of a public lipocalin website (http://www.jenner.ac.uk/lipocalins.htm). In spite of all these recent joint actions from the lipocalin community, the need for another anthology has been expressed. Many new exciting publications have been issued during the past five years, partially outdating the 2000 BBA lipocalin anthology. Likewise, the three events mentioned above have undoubtedly had a positive effect upon lipocalin research and the exchange of research information. As a result the community of lipocalin researchers is highly motivated to continue such pan-lipocalin activities. Several of the chapters in this volume are reviews of groups of lipocalins with a similar phylogenetic or tissue distribution (Chapters 4-6, 12 and 13). Furthermore, two chapters discuss the evolutionary and structural relationships between the lipocalins (Chapters 2 and 3) and the penultimate three chapters are treatises on themes in lipocalin research: receptors, allergy, and clinical diagnosis (Chapters 14-16); the final chapter discusses how lipocalin research might go in future.

    Preface 1. Lipocalins: An Introduction 2. Lipocalin Genes and Their Evolutionary History 3. The Lipocalin Protein Family: Protein Sequence, Structure and Relationship to the Calycin Superfamily 4. Bacterial Lipocalins: Origin, Structure, and Function 5. Plant Lipocalins 6. Lipocalins in Arthropoda: Diversification and Functional Explorations 7. Retinol Binding Protein and Its Interaction with Transthyretin 8. Siderocalins 9. Lipocalin-Type Prostaglandin D Synthase as an Enzymic Lipocalin 10. oq-Microglobulin 11. Glycodelin: A Lipocalin with Diverse Glycoform-Dependent Actions 12. Functional Aspects of ?-Lactoglobulin, Major Urinary Protein and Odorant Binding Protein 13. The Plasma Lipocalinsotj-Acid Glycoprotein, Apolipoprotein D, Apolipoprotein M and Complement Protein C 8 y 14. Lipocalin Receptors: Into the Spotlight 15. Important Mammalian Respiratory Allergens Are Lipocalins 16. Lipocalins in Clinical Medicine 17. The Lipocalin Protein Family: Perspectives for Future Research.

    Biography

    Bo Akerstrom, Department of Clinical Sciences University of Lund, Lund, Sweden. Niels Bortegaard, Granulocyte Research Laboratory Department of Hematology L, Rigshospitalet Copenhagen, Denmark. Darren R. Flower, The Jenner Institute, University of Oxford, Compton, Berkshire, U.K. Jean-Philippe Salier, Inserm U519 University of Rouen, France Institut Federatif de Recherches Multidisciplinaires sur les Peptides, Rouen, France.