Lipid-binding serum glycoprotein

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LBP / BPI / CETP family, N-terminal domain
crystal structure of bpi, the human bactericidal permeability-increasing protein
Identifiers
SymbolLBP_BPI_CETP
PfamPF01273
InterProIPR017942
PROSITEPDOC00367
SCOP21bp1 / SCOPe / SUPFAM
TCDB1.C.40
OPM superfamily170
OPM protein2obd
Available protein structures:
PDB  IPR017942 PF01273 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
AlphaFold
LBP / BPI / CETP family, C-terminal domain
crystal structure of bpi, the human bactericidal permeability-increasing protein
Identifiers
SymbolLBP_BPI_CETP_C
PfamPF02886
InterProIPR001124
PROSITEPDOC00367
SCOP21bp1 / SCOPe / SUPFAM
TCDB1.C.40
Available protein structures:
PDB  IPR001124 PF02886 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
AlphaFold

In molecular biology, the lipid-binding serum glycoproteins family, also known as the BPI/LBP/Plunc family or LBP/BPI/CETP family represents a family which includes mammalian lipid-binding serum glycoproteins and/or proteins containing a structural motif known as the BPI fold. Members of this family include:

These proteins consist of N- and C-terminal domains, which share a similar two-layer alpha/beta structure, but show little sequence identity to each other. These domains were first described as being arranged in a "boomerang" shape that creates the BPI fold.[4] The fold contains apolar binding pockets that can interact with hydrophobic and amphipathic molecules, such as the acyl carbon chains of lipopolysaccharide found on Gram-negative bacteria.

Family Members

Human proteins belonging to this family

References

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