Beyond Olfaction: New Insights into Human Odorant Binding Proteins
Mifen Chen, Soufyan Lakbir, Mihyeon Jeon, Vojta Mazur, Sanne Abeln, Halima Mouhib

TL;DR
This paper reviews new evidence suggesting human odorant binding proteins may have roles beyond olfaction, including hormone transport and implications in reproductive and hormone-dependent cancers, based on genetic and structural analyses.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of human OBP functions, expression, and structure, proposing novel roles in hormone transport and cancer biology beyond traditional olfactory functions.
Findings
OBPs are expressed in reproductive tissues.
Genetic alterations in OBPs affect gene expression in cancers.
Structural features suggest non-olfactory functions.
Abstract
Until today, the exact function of mammalian odorant binding proteins (OBPs) remains a topic of debate. Although their main established function lacks direct evidence in human olfaction, OBPs are traditionally believed to act as odorant transporters in the olfactory sense, which led to the exploration of OBPs as biomimetic sensor units in artificial noses. Now, available RNA-seq and proteomics data identified the expression of human OBPs (hOBP2A and hOBP2B) in both, male and female reproductive tissues. This observation prompted the conjecture that OBPs may possess functions that go beyond the olfactory sense, potentially as hormone transporters. Such a function could further link them to the tumorigenesis and cancer progression of hormone dependent cancer types including ovarian, breast, prostate and uterine cancer. In this structured review, we use available data to explore the…
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