Engineering the Processive Run Length of the Kinesin Motor
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Conventional kinesin is a highly processive molecular motor that takes several hundred steps per encounter with a microtubule. Processive motility is believed to result from the coordinated, hand-over-hand motion of the two heads of the kinesin dimer, but the specific factors that determine kinesin's run length (distance traveled per microtubule encounter) are not known. Here, we show that the neck coiled-coil, a structure adjacent to the motor domain, plays an important role in governing the run length. By adding positive charge to the neck coiled-coil, we have created ultra-processive kinesin mutants that have fourfold longer run lengths than the wild-type motor, but that have normal ATPase activity and motor velocity. Conversely, adding negative charge on the neck coiled-coil decreases the run length. The gain in processivity can be suppressed by either proteolytic cleavage of tubulin's negatively charged COOH terminus or by high salt concentrations. Therefore, modulation of processivity by the neck coiled-coil appears to involve an electrostatic tethering interaction with the COOH terminus of tubulin. The ability to readily increase kinesin processivity by mutation, taken together with the strong sequence conservation of the neck coiled-coil, suggests that evolutionary pressures may limit kinesin's run length to optimize its in vivo function.
Dissecting the pH Sensitivity of Kinesin-Driven Transport.
Baig F, Bakdaleyeh M, Bazzi H, Cao L, Tripathy S J Phys Chem B. 2024; 128(48):11855-11864.
PMID: 39575923 PMC: 11627161. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.4c03850.
Nesprin-2 coordinates opposing microtubule motors during nuclear migration in neurons.
Zhou C, Wu Y, Ishidate F, Fujiwara T, Kengaku M J Cell Biol. 2024; 223(11).
PMID: 39115447 PMC: 11310688. DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202405032.
Modeling the motion of disease-associated KIF1A heterodimers.
Kita T, Sasaki K, Niwa S Biophys J. 2023; 122(22):4348-4359.
PMID: 37853694 PMC: 10698283. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2023.10.014.
Liu Z, Zhou X, Chen B, Wu Z, Zhang C, Gu C Cell Cycle. 2023; 22(14-16):1726-1742.
PMID: 37436127 PMC: 10446804. DOI: 10.1080/15384101.2023.2222520.
Spatio-temporal patterning of extensile active stresses in microtubule-based active fluids.
Lemma L, Varghese M, Ross T, Thomson M, Baskaran A, Dogic Z PNAS Nexus. 2023; 2(5):pgad130.
PMID: 37168671 PMC: 10165807. DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgad130.