Artículos de revistas
Lipid-Free Antigen B Subunits from Echinococcus granulosus: Oligomerization, Ligand Binding, and Membrane Interaction Properties
Fecha
2015-03Registro en:
Silva Alvarez, Maria Valeria; Franchini, Gisela Raquel; Pórfido, Jorge Luis; Kennedy, Malcolm W.; Ferreira, Ana M.; et al.; Lipid-Free Antigen B Subunits from Echinococcus granulosus: Oligomerization, Ligand Binding, and Membrane Interaction Properties; Public Library of Science; Neglected Tropical Diseases; 9; 3; 3-2015; 1-23; e0003552
1935-2735
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Silva Alvarez, Maria Valeria
Franchini, Gisela Raquel
Pórfido, Jorge Luis
Kennedy, Malcolm W.
Ferreira, Ana M.
Córsico, Betina
Resumen
The hydatid disease parasite Echinococcus granulosus has a restricted lipid metabolism, and needs to harvest essential lipids from the host. Antigen B (EgAgB), an abundant lipoprotein of the larval stage (hydatid cyst), is thought to be important in lipid storage and transport. It contains a wide variety of lipid classes, from highly hydrophobic compounds to phospholipids. Its protein component belongs to the cestode-specific Hydrophobic Ligand Binding Protein family, which includes five 8-kDa isoforms encoded by a multigene family (EgAgB1-EgAgB5). How lipid and protein components are assembled into EgAgB particles remains unknown. EgAgB apolipoproteins self-associate into large oligomers, but the functional contribution of lipids to oligomerization is uncertain. Furthermore, binding of fatty acids to some EgAgB subunits has been reported, but their ability to bind other lipids and transfer them to acceptor membranes has not been studied.