A Tubulin Binding Switch Underlies Kip3/Kinesin-8 Depolymerase Activity
Overview
Reproductive Medicine
Authors
Affiliations
Kinesin-8 motors regulate the size of microtubule structures, using length-dependent accumulation at the plus end to preferentially disassemble long microtubules. Despite extensive study, the kinesin-8 depolymerase mechanism remains under debate. Here, we provide evidence for an alternative, tubulin curvature-sensing model of microtubule depolymerization by the budding yeast kinesin-8, Kip3. Kinesin-8/Kip3 uses ATP hydrolysis, like other kinesins, for stepping on the microtubule lattice, but at the plus end Kip3 undergoes a switch: its ATPase activity is suppressed when it binds tightly to the curved conformation of tubulin. This prolongs plus-end binding, stabilizes protofilament curvature, and ultimately promotes microtubule disassembly. The tubulin curvature-sensing model is supported by our identification of Kip3 structural elements necessary and sufficient for plus-end binding and depolymerase activity, as well as by the identification of an α-tubulin residue specifically required for the Kip3-curved tubulin interaction. Together, these findings elucidate a major regulatory mechanism controlling the size of cellular microtubule structures.
Phase separation of microtubule-binding proteins - implications for neuronal function and disease.
Duan D, Koleske A J Cell Sci. 2024; 137(24).
PMID: 39679446 PMC: 11795294. DOI: 10.1242/jcs.263470.
Mechanism and regulation of kinesin motors.
Yildiz A Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 2024; 26(2):86-103.
PMID: 39394463 DOI: 10.1038/s41580-024-00780-6.
Modeling study of kinesin-13 MCAK microtubule depolymerase.
Xie P Eur Biophys J. 2024; 53(5-6):339-354.
PMID: 39093405 DOI: 10.1007/s00249-024-01718-8.
Ultrasensitivity of microtubule severing due to damage repair.
Shiff C, Kondev J, Mohapatra L iScience. 2024; 27(2):108874.
PMID: 38327774 PMC: 10847648. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.108874.
Benoit M, Hunter B, Allingham J, Sosa H Biochem Soc Trans. 2023; 51(4):1505-1520.
PMID: 37560910 PMC: 10586761. DOI: 10.1042/BST20221238.