ADP-induced rocking of the kinesin motor domain revealed by single-molecule fluorescence polarization microscopy |
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Authors: | Sosa H Peterman E J Moerner W E Goldstein L S |
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Affiliation: | Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0683, USA. hsosa@aecom.yu.edu |
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Abstract: | Kinesin is an ATP-driven molecular motor protein that moves processively along microtubules. Despite considerable research, the detailed mechanism of kinesin motion remains elusive. We applied an enhanced suite of single- and multiple-molecule fluorescence polarization microscopy assays to report the orientation and mobility of kinesin molecules bound to microtubules as a function of nucleotide state. In the presence of analogs of ATP, ADP-Pi or in the absence of nucleotide, the kinesin head maintains a rigid orientation. In the presence of ADP, the motor domain of kinesin, still bound to the microtubule, adopts a previously undescribed, highly mobile state. This state may be general to the chemomechanical cycle of motor proteins; in the case of kinesin, the transition from a highly mobile to a rigid state after ADP release may contribute to the generation of the 8 nm step. |
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