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Key residues on microtubule responsible for activation of kinesin ATPase
Authors:You Hachikubo  Shin'ichi Ishiwata  Etsuko Muto
Affiliation:1. Laboratory for Molecular Biophysics, Brain Science Institute, RIKEN, Wako, Saitama, Japan;2. Department of Physics, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Waseda University, Shinjuku‐ku, Tokyo, Japan;3. Advanced Research Institute for Science and Engineering, Waseda University, Shinjuku‐ku, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Microtubule (MT) binding accelerates the rate of ATP hydrolysis in kinesin. To understand the underlying mechanism, using charged‐to‐alanine mutational analysis, we identified two independent sites in tubulin, which are critical for kinesin motility, namely, a cluster of negatively charged residues spanning the helix 11–12 (H11–12) loop and H12 of α‐tubulin, and the negatively charged residues in H12 of β‐tubulin. Mutation in the α‐tubulin‐binding site results in a deceleration of ATP hydrolysis (kcat), whereas mutation in the β‐tubulin‐binding site lowers the affinity for MTs (K0.5MT). The residue E415 in α‐tubulin seems to be important for coupling MT binding and ATPase activation, because the mutation at this site results in a drastic reduction in the overall rate of ATP hydrolysis, largely due to a deceleration in the reaction of ADP release. Our results suggest that kinesin binding at a region containing α‐E415 could transmit a signal to the kinesin nucleotide pocket, triggering its conformational change and leading to the release of ADP.
Keywords:ATPase kinetics  kinesin  microtubule  motility  mutant analysis
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