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Dynamitin mutagenesis reveals protein-protein interactions important for dynactin structure
Authors:Maier Kerstin C  Godfrey Jamie E  Echeverri Christophe J  Cheong Frances K Y  Schroer Trina A
Institution:Department of Biology, The Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA;
Cell Biology Group, Worcester Foundation for Biomedical Research, Shrewsbury, MA 01545, USA;
Cenix BioScience GmbH, 47 Tatzberg, Dresden 10307, Germany
Abstract:Dynactin is a highly conserved, multiprotein complex that works in conjunction with microtubule-based motors to power a variety of intracellular motile events. Dynamitin (p50) is a core element of dynactin structure. In the present study, we use targeted mutagenesis to evaluate how dynamitin's different structural domains contribute to its ability to self-associate, interact with dynactin and assemble into a complex with its close binding partner, p24. We show that these interactions involve three distinct structural elements: (i) a previously unidentified dimerization motif in the N-terminal 100 amino acids, (ii) an α-helical motif spanning aa 106–162 and (iii) the C-terminal half of the molecule (aa 213–406), which is predicted to fold into an antiparallel α-helix bundle. The N-terminal half of dynamitin by itself is sufficient to disrupt dynactin, although very high concentrations are required. The ability of mutations in dynamitin's interaction domains to disrupt dynactin in vitro was found to correlate with their inhibitory effects when expressed in cells. We determined that the dynactin subunit, p24, governs dynamitin oligomerization by binding dynamitin along its length. This suppresses aberrant multimerization and drives formation of a protein complex that is identical to the native dynactin shoulder.
Keywords:dynactin  dynein  microtubule  motility  motor
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