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1.
Allingham JS  Sproul LR  Rayment I  Gilbert SP 《Cell》2007,128(6):1161-1172
Conventional kinesin and class V and VI myosins coordinate the mechanochemical cycles of their motor domains for processive movement of cargo along microtubules or actin filaments. It is widely accepted that this coordination is achieved by allosteric communication or mechanical strain between the motor domains, which controls the nucleotide state and interaction with microtubules or actin. However, questions remain about the interplay between the strain and the nucleotide state. We present an analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Kar3/Vik1, a heterodimeric C-terminal Kinesin-14 containing catalytic Kar3 and the nonmotor protein Vik1. The X-ray crystal structure of Vik1 exhibits a similar fold to the kinesin and myosin catalytic head, but lacks an ATP binding site. Vik1 binds more tightly to microtubules than Kar3 and facilitates cooperative microtubule decoration by Kar3/Vik1 heterodimers, and yet allows motility. These results demand communication between Vik1 and Kar3 via a mechanism that coordinates their interactions with microtubules.  相似文献   

2.
Processivity of the Motor Protein Kinesin Requires Two Heads   总被引:11,自引:3,他引:8  
A single kinesin molecule can move for hundreds of steps along a microtubule without dissociating. One hypothesis to account for this processive movement is that the binding of kinesin's two heads is coordinated so that at least one head is always bound to the microtubule. To test this hypothesis, the motility of a full-length single-headed kinesin heterodimer was examined in the in vitro microtubule gliding assay. As the surface density of single-headed kinesin was lowered, there was a steep fall both in the rate at which microtubules landed and moved over the surface, and in the distance that microtubules moved, indicating that individual single-headed kinesin motors are not processive and that some four to six single-headed kinesin molecules are necessary and sufficient to move a microtubule continuously. At high ATP concentration, individual single-headed kinesin molecules detached from microtubules very slowly (at a rate less than one per second), 100-fold slower than the detachment during two-headed motility. This slow detachment directly supports a coordinated, hand-over-hand model in which the rapid detachment of one head in the dimer is contingent on the binding of the second head.  相似文献   

3.
We have examined several mutants in the switch I, switch II region of rat kinesin. Pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of association and dissociation of an N256K mutant with nucleotides and microtubules demonstrates that the mutation blocks microtubule stimulation of nucleotide release and ATP hydrolysis without affecting other kinetic parameters. The results suggest that ADP release on one head may be coupled to structural changes on the other head to stimulate ATP hydrolysis. Mutations at Glu(237), a residue predicted to participate in a hydrogen-bond interaction critical for nucleotide processing, reduced or abolished microtubule-dependent ATPase activity with only minor effects on pre-steady-state rates of nucleotide release or binding. Mutations at Glu(200), a residue that could serve as an alternate electron acceptor in the above-mentioned hydrogen-bond interaction, had small effects on microtubule-dependent ATPase activity despite modestly reducing the rate at which microtubule-stimulated nucleotide release occurs. These results further clarify the pathway of coupling of ATP hydrolysis to force production.  相似文献   

4.
Yun M  Zhang X  Park CG  Park HW  Endow SA 《The EMBO journal》2001,20(11):2611-2618
Molecular motors move along actin or microtubules by rapidly hydrolyzing ATP and undergoing changes in filament-binding affinity with steps of the nucleotide hydrolysis cycle. It is generally accepted that motor binding to its filament greatly increases the rate of ATP hydrolysis, but the structural changes in the motor associated with ATPase activation are not known. To identify the conformational changes underlying motor movement on its filament, we solved the crystal structures of three kinesin mutants that decouple nucleotide and microtubule binding by the motor, and block microtubule-activated, but not basal, ATPase activity. Conformational changes in the structures include a disordered loop and helices in the switch I region and a visible switch II loop, which is disordered in wild-type structures. Switch I moved closer to the bound nucleotide in two mutant structures, perturbing water-mediated interactions with the Mg2+. This could weaken Mg2+ binding and accelerate ADP release to activate the motor ATPASE: The structural changes we observe define a signaling pathway within the motor for ATPase activation that is likely to be essential for motor movement on microtubules.  相似文献   

5.
Recent studies have revealed that myosin IX is a single-headed processive myosin, yet it is unclear how myosin IX can achieve the processive movement. Here we studied the mechanism of ATP hydrolysis cycle of actomyosin IXb. We found that myosin IXb has a rate-limiting ATP hydrolysis step unlike other known myosins, thus populating the prehydrolysis intermediate (M.ATP). M.ATP has a high affinity for actin, and, unlike other myosins, the dissociation of M.ATP from actin was extremely slow, thus preventing myosin from dissociating away from actin. The ADP dissociation step was 10-fold faster than the overall ATP hydrolysis cycle rate and thus not rate-limiting. We propose the following model for single-headed processive myosin. Upon the formation of the M.ATP intermediate, the tight binding of actomyosin IX at the interface is weakened. However, the head is kept in close proximity to actin due to the tethering role of loop 2/large unique insertion of myosin IX. There is enough freedom for the myosin head to find the next location of the binding site along with the actin filament before complete dissociation from the filament. After ATP hydrolysis, Pi is quickly released to form a strong actin binding form, and a power stroke takes place.  相似文献   

6.
Kinesins are molecular motors that unidirectionally move along microtubules using the chemical energy of ATP. Although the core structure of kinesins is similar to that of myosins, the lever-arm hypothesis, which is widely accepted as a plausible mechanism to explain the behaviors of myosins, cannot be directly applied to kinesins. Masuda has proposed a mechanochemical process called the ‘Driven-by-Detachment (DbD)’ mechanism to explain the characteristic behaviors of myosins, including the backward movement of myosin VI and the loose coupling phenomenon of myosin II. The DbD mechanism assumes that the energy of ATP is mainly used to detach a myosin head from an actin filament by temporarily reducing the affinity of the myosin against the actin. After the affinity is recovered, the detached head has potential energy originating from the attractive force between the myosin and the actin. During the docking process, the potential energy is converted into elastic energy within the myosin molecule, and the intramolecular elastic energy is finally used to produce the power strokes. In the present paper, the DbD mechanism was used to explain the hand-over-hand motion of the conventional kinesin. The neck linker of the kinesin is known to determine the directionality of the motility but, in this paper, it was assumed that the neck linker was not directly engaged in the power strokes, which were driven by the attractive force between the kinesin head and the microtubule. Based on this assumption, simple mechanical simulations showed that the model of a kinesin dimer processively moved along a microtubule protofilament, if the affinity of the kinesin against the microtubule is appropriately controlled. Moreover, if an external force was applied to the center of the kinesin dimer, the dimer moved backward along a microtubule, as observed in experimental motility assays.  相似文献   

7.
Hackney DD 《Biochemistry》2002,41(13):4437-4446
Kinesin binds to microtubules with half-site ADP release to form a tethered intermediate with one attached head without nucleotide and one tethered head that retains its bound ADP. For DKH405 containing amino acid residues 1-405 of Drosophila kinesin, release of the remaining ADP from the tethered head is slow (0.05 s(-1)), but release is accelerated by added ADP or ATP. The maximum rate of ADP-stimulated dissociation of tethered DKH405 from the microtubule is approximately 12 s(-1) as determined by turbidity. Parallel measurements of ADP-stimulated release of 2'(3')-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl)-ADP (mantADP) from the tethered intermediate by fluorescence indicate that the reaction is biphasic with a fast phase that occurs at a rate that is similar to dissociation. The rate of the slow phase is dependent on the concentrations of salt and microtubules and is equal in each case to the rate for bimolecular stimulation of ADP release by microtubules as measured independently. These results are consistent with a scheme in which the fast phase, with approximately one-third of the total amplitude change, is due to ADP-stimulated release of mantADP from the tethered intermediate at approximately 6 s(-1). This direct release of mantADP continues until terminated by dissociation of DKH405 from the microtubule at approximately 12 s(-1). The majority of the amplitude change thus occurs through bimolecular recombination of DKH405.mantADP with microtubules following initial dissociation. Analysis of a simple scheme indicates that hydrolysis of ATP at the attached head before the tethered head can release its ADP and become tightly bound may be the principal limitation to processivity.  相似文献   

8.
Centromere protein E, CENP-E, is a kinetochore-associated kinesin-7 that establishes the microtubule-chromosome linkage and transports monooriented chromosomes to the spindle equator along kinetochore fibers of already bioriented chromosomes. As a processive kinesin, CENP-E uses a hand-over-hand mechanism, yet a number of studies suggest that CENP-E exhibits mechanistic differences from other processive kinesins that may be important for its role in chromosome congression. The results reported here show that association of CENP-E with the microtubule is unusually slow at 0.08 μM(-1) s(-1) followed by slow ADP release at 0.9 s(-1). ATP binding and hydrolysis are fast with motor dissociation from the microtubule at 1.4 s(-1), suggesting that CENP-E head detachment from the microtubule, possibly controlled by phosphate release, determines the rate of stepping during a processive run because the rate of microtubule gliding corresponds to 1.4 steps/s. We hypothesize that the unusually slow CENP-E microtubule association step favors CENP-E binding of stable microtubules over dynamic ones, a mechanism that would bias CENP-E binding to kinetochore fibers.  相似文献   

9.
Kinesin motor proteins use an ATP hydrolysis cycle to perform various functions in eukaryotic cells. Many questions remain about how the kinesin mechanochemical ATPase cycle is fine-tuned for specific work outputs. In this study, we use isothermal titration calorimetry and stopped-flow fluorometry to determine and analyze the thermodynamics of the human kinesin-5 (Eg5/KSP) ATPase cycle. In the absence of microtubules, the binding interactions of kinesin-5 with both ADP product and ATP substrate involve significant enthalpic gains coupled to smaller entropic penalties. However, when the wild-type enzyme is titrated with a non-hydrolyzable ATP analog or the enzyme is mutated such that it is able to bind but not hydrolyze ATP, substrate binding is 10-fold weaker than ADP binding because of a greater entropic penalty due to the structural rearrangements of switch 1, switch 2, and loop L5 on ATP binding. We propose that these rearrangements are reversed upon ATP hydrolysis and phosphate release. In addition, experiments on a truncated kinesin-5 construct reveal that upon nucleotide binding, both the N-terminal cover strand and the neck linker interact to modulate kinesin-5 nucleotide affinity. Moreover, interactions with microtubules significantly weaken the affinity of kinesin-5 for ADP without altering the affinity of the enzyme for ATP in the absence of ATP hydrolysis. Together, these results define the energy landscape of a kinesin ATPase cycle in the absence and presence of microtubules and shed light on the role of molecular motor mechanochemistry in cellular microtubule dynamics.  相似文献   

10.
The role of ATP hydrolysis for kinesin processivity   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Conventional kinesin is a highly processive, plus-end-directed microtubule-based motor that drives membranous organelles toward the synapse in neurons. Although recent structural, biochemical, and mechanical measurements are beginning to converge into a common view of how kinesin converts the energy from ATP turnover into motion, it remains difficult to dissect experimentally the intermolecular domain cooperativity required for kinesin processivity. We report here our pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of a kinesin switch I mutant at Arg(210) (NXXSSRSH, residues 205-212 in Drosophila kinesin). The results show that the R210A substitution results in a dimeric kinesin that is defective for ATP hydrolysis and a motor that cannot detach from the microtubule although ATP binding and microtubule association occur. We propose a mechanistic model in which ATP binding at head 1 leads to the plus-end-directed motion of the neck linker to position head 2 forward at the next microtubule binding site. However, ATP hydrolysis is required at head 1 to lock head 2 onto the microtubule in a tight binding state before head 1 dissociation from the microtubule. This mechanism optimizes forward movement and processivity by ensuring that one motor domain is tightly bound to the microtubule before the second can detach.  相似文献   

11.
Konishi K  Uyeda TQ  Kubo T 《FEBS letters》2006,580(15):3589-3594
Kinesin is a linear motor protein driven by energy released by ATP hydrolysis. In the present work, we genetically installed an M13 peptide sequence into Loop 12 of kinesin, which is one of the major microtubule binding regions of the protein. Because the M13 sequence has high affinity for Ca(2+)-calmodulin, the association of the engineered kinesin with microtubules showed a steep Ca(2+)-dependency in ATPase activity at Ca(2+) concentrations of pCa 6.5-8. The calmodulin-binding domain of plant kinesin-like calmodulin-binding protein is also known to confer Ca(2+)-calmodulin regulation to kinesins. Unlike this plant kinesin, however, our novel engineered kinesin achieves this regulation while maintaining the interaction between kinesin and microtubules. The engineered kinesin is switched on/off reversibly by an external signal (i.e., Ca(2+)-calmodulin) and, thus, can be used as a model system for a bio/nano-actuator.  相似文献   

12.
Muscle contraction results from an attachment–detachment cycle between the myosin heads extending from myosin filaments and the sites on actin filaments. The myosin head first attaches to actin together with the products of ATP hydrolysis, performs a power stroke associated with release of hydrolysis products, and detaches from actin upon binding with new ATP. The detached myosin head then hydrolyses ATP, and performs a recovery stroke to restore its initial position. The strokes have been suggested to result from rotation of the lever arm domain around the converter domain, while the catalytic domain remains rigid. To ascertain the validity of the lever arm hypothesis in muscle, we recorded ATP-induced movement at different regions within individual myosin heads in hydrated myosin filaments, using the gas environmental chamber attached to the electron microscope. The myosin head were position-marked with gold particles using three different site-directed antibodies. The amplitude of ATP-induced movement at the actin binding site in the catalytic domain was similar to that at the boundary between the catalytic and converter domains, but was definitely larger than that at the regulatory light chain in the lever arm domain. These results are consistent with the myosin head lever arm mechanism in muscle contraction if some assumptions are made.  相似文献   

13.
Cochran JC  Gilbert SP 《Biochemistry》2005,44(50):16633-16648
The ATPase mechanism of kinesin superfamily members in the absence of microtubules remains largely uncharacterized. We have adopted a strategy to purify monomeric human Eg5 (HsKSP/Kinesin-5) in the nucleotide-free state (apoEg5) in order to perform a detailed transient state kinetic analysis. We have used steady-state and presteady-state kinetics to define the minimal ATPase mechanism for apoEg5 in the absence and presence of the Eg5-specific inhibitor, monastrol. ATP and ADP binding both occur via a two-step process with the isomerization of the collision complex limiting each forward reaction. ATP hydrolysis and phosphate product release are rapid steps in the mechanism, and the observed rate of these steps is limited by the relatively slow isomerization of the Eg5-ATP collision complex. A conformational change coupled to ADP release is the rate-limiting step in the pathway. We propose that the microtubule amplifies and accelerates the structural transitions needed to form the ATP hydrolysis competent state and for rapid ADP release, thus stimulating ATP turnover and increasing enzymatic efficiency. Monastrol appears to bind weakly to the Eg5-ATP collision complex, but after tight ATP binding, the affinity for monastrol increases, thus inhibiting the conformational change required for ADP product release. Taken together, we hypothesize that loop L5 of Eg5 undergoes an "open" to "closed" structural transition that correlates with the rearrangements of the switch-1 and switch-2 regions at the active site during the ATPase cycle.  相似文献   

14.
Neurodegenerative diseases may result in part from defects in motor‐driven vesicle transport in neuronal cells. Myosin‐V, an actin‐based motor that is highly enriched in the brain, mediates the movement of vesicles on cortical actin filaments. Recent evidence suggests that the globular tail of myosin‐V interacts with the microtubule‐based motor, kinesin, to form a ‘hetero‐motor’ complex on vesicles. The complex of these two motors, one microtubule‐based and the other actin‐based, facilitates the movement of vesicles from microtubules to actin filaments. Based on our studies of vesicle transport by these two motors in extracts of squid neurons, we hypothesize that one of the functions of the tail–tail interaction is to provide feedback between the two proteins to allow seamless transition of vesicles from microtubules to actin filaments. To study the interactions of the globular tail domain of myosin‐V to kinesin and to neuronal vesicles, we used a GST‐tagged globular tail fragment in motility assays. The MyoV tail fragment inhibited vesicle transport by 81–91% and thereby exhibited a dominant negative effect. These data show that the recombinant protein blocked the activity of native myosin‐V presumably by binding to vesicles and competing away the native myosin‐V motors. The GST‐MyoV‐tail fragment pulled down kinesin by immunoprecipitation from squid brain homogenates and therefore it exhibited binding properties of native myosin‐V. These data show that the headless myosin‐V fragment is an effective inhibitor of vesicle transport in cell extracts. These studies support the hypothesis that tail–tail interactions may be a mechanism for feedback between myosin‐V and kinesin to allow transition of vesicles from microtubules to actin filaments. Acknowledgements: Supported by NSF grant MCB9974709.  相似文献   

15.
Quantitative analyses of ATP hydrolysis coupled to movement of eukaryotic flagella is important for understanding the relationship between ATP hydrolysis and movement. The difference in ATPase activity between intact motile axonemes (that is the cytoskeletal core of flagella) and homogenized or immotile axonemes has been assumed to be coupled to movement. However, recent findings on rates of steps in the dynein ATPase cycle and the effect of interaction with microtubules on those steps call for reassessment of movement-coupled ATPase. From these studies, it is clear that dynein ATPase activity is not as tightly coupled to interaction with microtubules as myosin ATPase activity is coupled to interaction with actin. The method by which axonemal movement is inhibited will critically affect the interpretation of difference in ATPase activity. If the homogenization or similar methods uncouple dynein, the difference in ATPase activity is not a useful measurement. Greater understanding of the relationship between dynein kinetics and axonemal movement may be obtained by use of conditions and substrates with known effects at specific steps in the dynein mechanochemical cycle and quantitating their effects on movement.  相似文献   

16.
Motor proteins such as kinesin, myosin and polymerase convert chemical energy into work through a cycle that involves nucleotide hydrolysis. Kinetic rates in the cycle that depend upon load identify transitions at which structural changes, such as power strokes or diffusive motions, are likely to occur. Here we show, by modelling data obtained with a molecular force clamp, that kinesin mechanochemistry can be characterized by a mechanism in which a load-dependent isomerization follows ATP binding. This model quantitatively accounts for velocity data over a wide range of loads and ATP levels, and indicates that movement may be accomplished through two sequential 4-nm substeps. Similar considerations account for kinesin processivity, which is found to obey a load-dependent Michaelis-Menten relationship.  相似文献   

17.
The myosin motor protein generates force in muscle by hydrolyzing Adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) while interacting transiently with actin. Structural evidence suggests the myosin globular head (subfragment 1 or S1) is articulated with semi-rigid catalytic and lever-arm domains joined by a flexible converter domain. According to the prevailing hypothesis for energy transduction, ATP binding and hydrolysis in the catalytic domain drives the relative movement of the lever arm. Actin binding and reversal of the lever-arm movement (power stroke) applies force to actin. These domains interface at the reactive lysine, Lys84, where trinitrophenylation (TNP-Lys84-S1) was observed in this work to block actin activation of myosin ATPase and in vitro sliding of actin over myosin. TNP-Lys84-S1's properties and interactions with actin were examined to determine how trinitrophenylation causes these effects. Weak and strong actin binding, the rate of mantADP release from actomyosin, and actomyosin dissociation by ATP were equivalent in TNP-Lys84-S1 and native S1. Molecular dynamics calculations indicate that lever-arm movement inhibition during ATP hydrolysis and the power stroke is caused by steric clashes between TNP and the converter or lever-arm domains. Together these findings suggest that TNP uncouples actin activation of myosin ATPase and the power stroke from other steps in the contraction cycle by inhibiting the converter and lever-arm domain movements.  相似文献   

18.
Understanding how chemical energy is converted into directed movement is a fundamental problem in biology. In higher organisms this is accomplished through the hydrolysis of ATP by three families of motor proteins: myosin, dynein and kinesin. The most abundant of these is myosin, which operates against actin and plays a central role in muscle contraction. As summarized here, great progress has been made towards understanding the molecular basis of movement through the determination of the three-dimensional structures of myosin and actin and through the establishment of systems for site-directed mutagenesis of this motor protein. It now appears that the generation of movement is coupled to ATP hydrolysis by a series of domain movements within myosin.  相似文献   

19.
Eg5/KSP is a homotetrameric, Kinesin-5 family member whose ability to cross-link microtubules has associated it with mitotic spindle assembly and dynamics for chromosome segregation. Transient-state kinetic methodologies have been used to dissect the mechanochemical cycle of a dimeric motor, Eg5-513, to better understand the cooperative interactions that modulate processive stepping. Microtubule association, ADP release, and ATP binding are all fast steps in the pathway. However, the acid-quench analysis of the kinetics of ATP hydrolysis with substrate in excess of motor was unable to resolve a burst of product formation during the first turnover event. In addition, the kinetics of P(i) release and ATP-promoted microtubule-Eg5 dissociation were observed to be no faster than the rate of ATP hydrolysis. In combination the data suggest that dimeric Eg5 is the first kinesin motor identified to have a rate-limiting ATP hydrolysis step. Furthermore, several lines of evidence implicate alternating-site catalysis as the molecular mechanism underlying dimeric Eg5 processivity. Both mantATP binding and mantADP release transients are biphasic. Analysis of ATP hydrolysis through single turnover assays indicates a surprising substrate concentration dependence, where the observed rate is reduced by half when substrate concentration is sufficiently high to require both motor domains of the dimer to participate in the reaction.  相似文献   

20.
S Iwatani  A H Iwane  H Higuchi  Y Ishii  T Yanagida 《Biochemistry》1999,38(32):10318-10323
To probe the structural changes within kinesin molecules, we made the mutants of motor domains of two-headed kinesin (4-411 aa) in which either all the five cysteines or all except Cys45 were mutated. A residual cysteine (Cys45) of the kinesin mutant was labeled with an environment-sensitive fluorescent probe, acrylodan. ATPase activity, mechanical properties, and fluorescence intensity of the mutants were measured. Upon acrylodan-labeled kinesin binding to microtubules in the presence of 1 mM AMPPNP, the peak intensity was enhanced by 3.4-fold, indicating the structural change of the kinesin head by the binding. Substitution of cysteines decreased both the maximum microtubule-activated ATPase and the sliding velocity to the same extent. However, the maximum force and the step size were not affected; the force produced by a single molecule was 6-6.5 pN, and a step size due to the hydrolysis of one ATP molecule by kinesin molecules was about 10 nm for all kinesins. This step size was close to a unitary step size of 8 nm. Thus, the mechanical events of kinesin are tightly coupled with the chemical events.  相似文献   

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