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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 35, 1976-1984, Copyright © 1994 by Lipid Research, Inc.
Exchangeable apolipoproteins of insects share a common structural motif
AF Smith, LM Owen, LM Strobel, H Chen, MR Kanost, E Hanneman and MA Wells
Department of Biochemistry, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721.
Elucidation of the secondary structure of the exchangeable apolipoproteins
has been hindered by the difficulty in producing crystals suitable for
X-ray spectrographic analyses. Consequently, in order to analyze potential
structure-function relationships in the family of insect exchangeable
apolipoproteins, apolipophorins-III (apoLps-III), two apoLps-III cDNA
clones, one from the palo verde beetle (Derobrachus geminatus) and one from
the house cricket (Acheta domesticus), have been isolated and sequenced.
Multiple sequence alignments of the deduced protein sequences with two
previously reported apolipophorins-III from Manduca sexta and Locusta
migratoria reveal low sequence identity, suggesting that these proteins are
very old and are highly divergent. Computer-assisted predictions of protein
structure and subsequent analyses, using the known secondary structure of
Locusta migratoria apolipophorin-III as a control, indicate that these
insect proteins are composed of five amphipathic helices with
characteristics similar to those of the helical domains of the mammalian
exchangeable apolipoproteins. Thus, although insect and vertebrate
exchangeable apolipoproteins share a common function in assisting lipid
transport, precise amino acid identity is less important than the common
structural feature of multiple amphipathic helices. Moreover, because these
proteins occur widely among insect species, even in those where flight is
limited or absent, we hypothesize that apolipophorin-III has a more
generalized function in lipid metabolism than had been previously proposed.

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Copyright © 1994 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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