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A single lysyl residue defines the binding specificity of a human odorant‐binding protein for aldehydes

66

Citations

20

References

2006

Year

Abstract

Odorant-binding proteins (OBPs) are small abundant soluble proteins belonging to the lipocalin superfamily, which are thought to carry hydrophobic odorants through aqueous mucus towards olfactory receptors. Human variant hOBP-2A has been demonstrated to bind numerous odorants of different chemical classes with a higher affinity for aldehydes and fatty acids. Three lysyl residues of the binding pocket (Lys62, Lys82 and Lys112) have been suggested as candidates for playing such a role. Here, using site-directed mutagenesis and fluorescent probe displacements, we show that Lys112 is the major determinant for governing hOBP-2A specificity towards aldehydes and small carboxylic acids.

References

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