“…To what extent are the apparent biological properties of individual lipocalins mediated directly by the protein structure itself (ligand binding [35,83,84], complexation [35,44,50] and receptor interaction [61,136]), by post-translational modifications (glycosylation state [99,109], chromophores [51], or membrane anchors [5]), or by combination of the two, such as the formation of disulphide linked complexes [41,44,49] ? Are the allergenic properties of several, evolutionarily distinct lipocalins [6] merely a co-incidental property of their individual structures, or do they result from conserved structural features, such as the ability to interact with cellular receptors, common to the family ? Can the immunosuppressive and cell-regulation functions of the family be linked to macromolecular complexation, perhaps through the modulation of proteinase-mediated cell signalling [137], either by the down-regulation of protease inhibitors [50] or by the direct inhibition of proteases themselves [42] ?…”