Trappins are found in human, bovine, hippopotamus, and members of the pig family, but not in rat and mouse. To clarify the evolution of the trappin genes and the functional significance of their products, we isolated the trappin gene in guinea pig, a species belonging to a rodent family distinct from rat and mouse. Guinea pig trappin was confirmed to encode the same domain structure as trappin, consisting of a signal sequence, an extra large transglutaminase substrate domain, and a whey acidic protein motif. Northern blot analysis and in situ hybridization histochemistry as well as immunohistochemistry demonstrated that guinea pig trappin is expressed solely in the secretory epithelium of the seminal vesicle and that its expression is androgen-dependent. We confirmed that guinea pig trappin is crosslinked by prostate transglutaminase and that the whey acidic protein motif derived from guinea pig trappin has an inhibitory activity against leukocyte elastase. Genome sequence analysis showed that guinea pig trappin belongs to the family of REST (rapidly evolving seminal vesicle transcribed) genes.Trappins are a family of secreted proteins composed of two domains: a transglutaminase substrate (TGS) 1 domain and a whey acidic protein (WAP) motif (1). The TGS domain serves as an anchoring sequence through which trappins become covalently trapped at the site of action (2, 3). Covalent anchoring is mediated by transglutaminase, a Ca 2ϩ -dependent enzyme that catalyzes cross-linking of proteins between Lys and Gln side chains (4 -6). The WAP motif comprises eight Cys residues that form four disulfide bonds in a conserved arrangement. This four-disulfide core structure was first described in whey acidic protein in mouse milk and thus was named the "WAP motif" (7). Members of the family of WAP motif proteins contain one to three WAP motifs, many of which have proteinase inhibitor activity and/or antibacterial activity (8, 9). Trappins are unique in having TGS domains in their N termini among diverse family members of WAP motif-containing proteins that include toxins, pollen allergens, serine proteinase inhibitors, growth inhibitors, calcium transport inhibitors, and others whose functions have not yet been determined (10 -17).The two-domain structure of trappins suggested that such a combined structure might have evolved by exon shuffling between ancestral genes for a TGS protein and a WAP motif protein. Determination of the structures of trappin genes by us (18 -20) and those of the semenogelin or seminal vesicle clotting protein (SVP) genes (21-23) indeed revealed a significant similarity between the trappin genes and the semenogelin or SVP genes that encode TGSs and are collectively called REST (rapidly evolving seminal vesicle transcribed) genes. Furthermore, phylogenetic analysis of the WAP motif sequences indicated that the WAP signature sequence of trappins is most closely related to the second WAP motif of the secretory leukocyte proteinase inhibitor (SLPI), which has two WAP motifs in tandem (18). These findings ...