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Query: EC:3.6.4.4 (
kinesin
)
5,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Studies of organelle movement in axoplasm extruded from the squid giant axon have led to the basic discoveries of microtubule-dependent organelle motility and the characterization of the microtubule-based motor proteins
kinesin
and cytoplasmic dynein. Rapid organelle movement in higher animal cells, especially in neurons, is considered to be microtubule-based. The role of actin filaments, which are also abundant in axonal cytoplasm, has remained unclear. The inhibition of organelle movement in axoplasm by actin-binding proteins such as DNase I,
gelsolin
and synapsin I has been attributed to their ability to disorganize the microtubule domains where most of the actin-filaments are located. Here we provide evidence of a new type of organelle movement in squid axoplasm which is independent of both microtubules and microtubule-based motors. This movement is ATP-dependent, unidirectional, actin-dependent, and probably generated by a myosin-like motor. These results demonstrate that an actomyosin-like mechanism can be directly involved in the generation of rapid organelle transport in nerve cells.
...
PMID:Actin-dependent organelle movement in squid axoplasm. 157 18
In this study, we report sites in the seminiferous epithelium of the rat testis that are immunoreactive with antibodies to the intermediate chain of cytoplasmic dynein and
kinesin
II. The study was done to determine whether or not microtubule-dependent motor proteins are present in Sertoli cell regions involved with spermatid translocation. Sections and epithelial fragments of perfusion-fixed rat testis were probed with an antibody (clone 74.1) to the intermediate chain of cytoplasmic dynein (IC74) and to
kinesin
-II. Labeling with the antibody to cytoplasmic dynein was dramatically evident in Sertoli cell regions surrounding apical crypts containing attached spermatids and known to contain unique intercellular attachment plaques. The antibody to
kinesin
II reacted only with spermatid tails. The levels of cytoplasmic dynein visible on immunoblots of supernatants collected from spermatid/junction complexes treated with an actin-severing enzyme (
gelsolin
) were greater than those of controls, indicating that at least some of the dynein may have been associated with Sertoli cell junction plaques attached to spermatids. Results are consistent with the conclusion that an isoform of cytoplasmic dynein may be responsible for the apical translocation of elongate spermatids that occurs before sperm release. Also, this is the first report of
kinesin
-II in mammalian spermatid tails.
...
PMID:Rat testis motor proteins associated with spermatid translocation (dynein) and spermatid flagella (kinesin-II). 1008 83
HIKE is a highly conserved sequence motif identified as a candidate pleckstrin-homology (PH) domain binding site in Gbeta proteins, protein kinases, ankyrin and
kinesin
. HIKE motifs occur also in
gelsolin
, neurogranin, neuromodulin and in the PH domain of Bruton tyrosin kinase (BTK). Phosphatidylinositol-binding sequences more distantly related to HIKE are present in
gelsolin
, in the G protein-coupled receptor kinase 4 and in Trop-2. HIKE regions have been demonstrated to bind both proteins and lipids, and to regulate the interaction of Gbeta, neuromodulin and the BTK PH domain with downstream effectors and the cell membrane. Remarkably, mutations of the HIKE regions are common in diverse human genetic diseases. Several HIKE mutations in protein kinases lead to constitutive activation and cellular transformation, e.g. in MEN-2B, acute myeloid and mast cell leukemias, hereditary papillary renal carcinomas and multiple myeloma. Kinase-inactivating HIKE mutations cause Hirschsprung's disease, piebaldism, insulin resistance and developmental dysplasias. HIKE mutations in the PH domain of BTK lead to X-linked agammaglobulinemia, and different forms of amyloidosis are caused by mutations of HIKE-bearing molecules, for example
gelsolin
, Ret and Trop-2. Thus, quite diverse genetic diseases might share common molecular mechanisms. These include altered interactions of the mutated molecules with downstream effectors or the cell membrane, and defects in intracellular transport.
...
PMID:Large and diverse numbers of human diseases with HIKE mutations. 1076 24
The mechanism responsible for spermatid translocation in the mammalian seminiferous epithelium was proposed to be the microtubule-based transport of specialized junction plaques (ectoplasmic specializations) that occur in Sertoli cell regions attached to spermatid heads. These plaques each consist of a cistern of endoplasmic reticulum, a layer of actin filaments and the adjacent plasma membrane. It is predicted that motor proteins function to move the junction plaques, and hence the attached spermatids, first towards the base and then back to the apex of the epithelium, along microtubules. If this hypothesis is true, motor proteins should be associated with the cytoplasmic face of the endoplasmic reticulum component of ectoplasmic specializations. In addition, isolated junction plaques should support microtubule movement both in the plus and minus directions to account for the bidirectional translocation of spermatids in vivo. To determine if cytoplasmic dynein is localized to the endoplasmic reticulum of the plaques, perfusion-fixed rat testes were immunologically probed, at the ultrastructural level, for the intermediate chain of cytoplasmic dynein (IC74). In addition, testicular fractions enriched for spermatid/junction complexes were incubated with and without
gelsolin
, centrifuged and the supernatants compared, by western blot analysis, for Glucose Regulated Protein 94 (a marker for endoplasmic reticulum) and IC74. At the ultrastructural level, the probe for IC74 clearly labelled material associated with the cytoplasmic face of the endoplasmic reticulum component of the junction plaques. In the
gelsolin
experiments, both probes reacted more strongly with appropriate bands from the
gelsolin
-treated supernatants than with corresponding bands from controls. To determine if the junction plaques support microtubule transport in both directions, polarity-labelled microtubules were bound to isolated spermatid/junction complexes and then assessed for motility in the presence of ATP and testicular cytosol (2 mg/ml). Of 25 recorded motility events, 17 were in a direction consistent with a plus-end directed motor being present, and 8 were in the minus-end direction. The results are consistent with the conclusion that the junction plaques have the potential for moving along microtubules in both the plus and minus directions and that both a
kinesin
-type and a dynein-type motor may be associated with the junction plaques. The data also indicate that cytoplasmic dynein is localized to the cytoplasmic face of the endoplasmic reticulum component of the plaques.
...
PMID:Dynein and plus-end microtubule-dependent motors are associated with specialized Sertoli cell junction plaques (ectoplasmic specializations). 1082 90
The hand-over-hand stepping mechanism of
kinesin
at low loads is inadequately understood because the number of molecular steps taken per encounter with the microtubule is difficult to measure: optical traps do not register steps at zero load, while evanescent wave microscopy of single molecules of GFP-
kinesin
suffers from premature photobleaching. Obtaining low-load data is important because it can efficiently distinguish between alternative proposed mechanisms for molecular walking. We report a novel experiment that records the missing data. We fused
kinesin
to
gelsolin
, creating a construct that severs and caps rhodamine-phalloidin actin filaments, setting exactly one
kinesin
molecule on one end of each fluorescent actin filament. Single
kinesin
molecules labeled in this way can be tracked easily and definitively using a standard epifluorescence microscope. We use the new system to show that, contrary to a recent report,
kinesin
run length at low load is independent of ATP concentration in the muM to mM range of ATP concentration. Adding competitor ADP in the presence of saturating ATP decreases both velocity and run length. Based on these data, we propose a simplified model for the mechanism of processive stepping.
...
PMID:Direct long-term observation of kinesin processivity at low load. 1186 70
A fusion protein of
kinesin
and
gelsolin
binds a short actin filament which can be visualized using a standard fluorescence microscope. This technique has provided new insight into the mechanism of
kinesin
action, and in principle it can be extended to allow single-molecule assays of any protein.
...
PMID:Molecular motors: single-molecule recordings made easy. 1190 46
Supervillin, the largest member of the villin/
gelsolin
/flightless family, is a peripheral membrane protein that regulates each step of cell motility, including cell spreading. Most known interactors bind within its amino (N)-terminus. We show here that the supervillin carboxy (C)-terminus can be modeled as supervillin-specific loops extending from
gelsolin
-like repeats plus a villin-like headpiece. We have identified 27 new candidate interactors from yeast two-hybrid screens. The interacting sequences from 12 of these proteins (BUB1, EPLIN/LIMA1, FLNA, HAX1, KIF14, KIFC3, MIF4GD/SLIP1, ODF2/Cenexin, RHAMM, STARD9/KIF16A, Tks5/SH3PXD2A, TNFAIP1) co-localize with and mis-localize EGFP-supervillin in mammalian cells, suggesting associations in vivo. Supervillin-interacting sequences within BUB1, FLNA, HAX1, and MIF4GD also mimic supervillin over-expression by inhibiting cell spreading. Most new interactors have known roles in supervillin-associated processes, e.g. cell motility, membrane trafficking, ERK signaling, and matrix invasion; three (KIF14, KIFC3, STARD9/KIF16A) have
kinesin
motor domains; and five (EPLIN, KIF14, BUB1, ODF2/cenexin, RHAMM) are important for cell division. GST fusions of the supervillin G2-G3 or G4-G6 repeats co-sediment KIF14 and EPLIN, respectively, consistent with a direct association. Supervillin depletion leads to increased numbers of bi- and multi-nucleated cells. Cytokinesis failure occurs predominately during early cytokinesis. Supervillin localizes with endogenous myosin II and EPLIN in the cleavage furrow, and overlaps with the oncogenic
kinesin
, KIF14, at the midbody. We conclude that supervillin, like its interactors, is important for efficient cytokinesis. Our results also suggest that supervillin and its interaction partners coordinate actin and microtubule motor functions throughout the cell cycle.
...
PMID:Novel interactors and a role for supervillin in early cytokinesis. 2030 63