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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)
Ultrastructural and functional studies of degranulation responses by human neutrophils have suggested that microtubules (MTs) have a role in the intracellular transport of neutrophil granules. We have found that granule-MT complexes can be isolated from disrupted taxol-treated (1.0 microM) neutrophils, visualized by electron microscopy, and quantified in terms of granules per MT length. After incubation of neutrophils with the chemotactic peptide N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP), granule-MT complex formation was found to be increased two- to threefold. Enhanced binding of granules to MTs was detectable within 30 s of fMLP stimulation and was dependent on the concentration of fMLP. Incubation of cells with dibutyryl cAMP inhibited this fMLP-stimulated granule-MT complex formation in a dose-responsive fashion. These granule-MT interactions could be reproduced in a cell-free system with neutrophil granules isolated by density gradient centrifugation and MTs polymerized from phosphocellulose-purified tubulin. Furthermore, reconstituted granule-MT interactions were found to be modulated by ATPase inhibitors. Sodium orthovanadate increased granule-MT interactions in a concentration-dependent manner, while AMP-PNP, a nonhydrolyzable
ATP
analogue, and N-ethylmaleimide decreased or eliminated these interactions. In addition, we found that a MT-activated ATPase could be recovered from intact neutrophil granules by salt extraction, and that extracts enriched in this ATPase contained a polypeptide of between 115 and 120 kD which binds
ATP
and is immunologically related to
kinesin
. These studies demonstrate that cytoplasmic granules interact with MTs in human neutrophils in a regulated stimulus-responsive manner, and they suggest that such interactions may involve an MT-based, ATPase-dependent, vesicle translocation system as has been demonstrated in other types of cells.
...
PMID:Interactions of cytoplasmic granules with microtubules in human neutrophils. 254 7
Freeze-etch electron microscopy of pure RecA protein aggregates, as well as of RecA protein complexes on single-stranded and double-stranded DNA formed with various nucleotides, has permitted a clearer discrimination between the two different helical polymers that this protein forms. Both are continuous, single-start, right-handed helices; however, the form observed when
ATP
or non-hydrolyzable
ATP
analogs are present has a pitch of 9.5 nm and a diameter of 10 nm, while the other form, observed in the absence of
ATP
or its analogs, or in the presence of ADP, has a pitch of 6 nm and a diameter of 12 nm. The former "long pitch" helix is found only when RecA protein is bound to DNA. The latter "short pitch" helix is also observed in pure RecA protein polymers (also termed rods) and in the needle-like paracrystals of RecA protein that form in the presence of magnesium or spermidine ions, representing bundles of rods closely packed in register. Addition of
ATP
or non-hydrolyzable
ATP
analogs in the absence of DNA dissociates the pure RecA protein crystals, as well as individual helical rods, into short curvilinear chains of attached monomers. These chains typically form closed, circular rings of 7(+/- 1) protein monomers, similar in construction to a single turn of the RecA protein helix, but significantly broader in diameter. The role of
ATP
in interconverting the various polymeric forms of RecA protein is discussed within the context that
ATP
functions as a reversible allosteric effector of RecA protein, much as it mediates reversible conformational changes in other vectoral motor proteins such as myosin, dynein,
kinesin
and the 70,000 Mr "heat shock" ATPases. We discuss how cyclic conversions back and forth between the short- and long-pitch conformations of RecA protein could mediate in reversible single-stranded and double-stranded DNA interactions during the search for homology.
...
PMID:Visualization of RecA protein and its complexes with DNA by quick-freeze/deep-etch electron microscopy. 269 35
We report an ATPase activity, present in sea urchin egg cytosol, that is activated by microtubules. The activity sediments at 10 S in sucrose gradients and is clearly distinct from activities at 12 S and 20 S due to cytoplasmic dynein. Potent activation of the ATPase is observed when endogenous egg tubulin is induced to assemble with taxol or when exogenous taxol-stabilized pure brain tubulin microtubules or flagellar outer-doublet microtubules are added. No activation by tubulin subunits or taxol alone is detectable. In contrast to flagellar or cytoplasmic dynein, the microtubule-activated enzyme is unaffected by vanadate or by nonionic detergents and hydrolyzes GTP in addition to
ATP
. In contrast to
kinesin
, it cosediments with microtubules in the presence or absence of
ATP
. The microtubule-activated enzyme may have a role in microtubule-based motility.
...
PMID:A microtubule-activated ATPase from sea urchin eggs, distinct from cytoplasmic dynein and kinesin. 287 71
In this report, we describe an in vitro system for analyzing microtubule-based movements in supernatants of sea urchin egg and embryo homogenates. Using video enhanced DIC microscopy, we have observed bidirectional saltatory particle movements on native taxol-stabilized microtubules assembled in low speed supernatants of Lytechinus egg homogenates, and gliding of these microtubules across a glass surface. A high speed supernatant of soluble proteins, depleted of organelles, microtubules, and their associated proteins supports the gliding of exogenous microtubules and translocation of polystyrene beads along these microtubules. The direction of microtubule gliding has been determined directly by observation of the gliding of flagellar axonemes in which the (+) and (-) ends could be distinguished by biased polar growth of microtubules off the ends. Microtubule gliding is toward the (-) end of the microtubule, is
ATP
sensitive, and inhibited only by high concentrations of vanadate. These characteristics suggest that the transport complex responsible for microtubule gliding in S2 is
kinesin
-like. The implications of these molecular interactions for mitosis and other motile events are discussed.
...
PMID:Polarized microtubule gliding and particle saltations produced by soluble factors from sea urchin eggs and embryos. 287 41
Recently, a protein called
kinesin
was described, which is capable of inducing movement of inert particles along microtubules. To purify this protein from bovine brain, we used the ability of
kinesin
to bind to taxol-stabilized microtubules in the presence of inorganic tripolyphosphate. The brain
kinesin
preparation contained one major polypeptide of 135 kDa and four minor polypeptides of 45-70 kDa. The minor polypeptides were eluted from a gel-permeation chromatography column at the same position as the major component. All the polypeptides of the preparation were capable of binding to the microtubules under identical conditions. The
kinesin
molecule is most probably a complex of these polypeptides. Brain
kinesin
had a very low ATPase activity (0.06-0.08 mumol X min-1 X mg-1 in 3 mM Mg2+ at pH 6.7). ATPase activity was strongly stimulated by microtubules (Vmax = 4.6 mumol per min per mg of
kinesin
). Microtubule-activated
kinesin
ATPase had a Km for
ATP
between 10 and 12 X 10(-6) M and a Kapp for microtubules (i.e., polymerized tubulin concentration required for a half-maximal activation) of 12-14 X 10(-6) M. Kinesin had a significant ATPase activity even without microtubules if 2 mM Ca2+ was substituted for Mg2+ (Vmax = 1.6 mumol X min-1 X mg-1; Km = 800 X 10(-6) M). Kinesin is therefore a mechanochemical ATPase that is activated by microtubules.
...
PMID:Bovine brain kinesin is a microtubule-activated ATPase. 294 42
Coupling between
ATP
hydrolysis and microtubule movement was demonstrated several years ago in flagellar axonemes and subsequent studies suggest that the relevant microtubule motor, dynein, uses
ATP
to drive microtubule sliding by a cross-bridge mechanism analogous to that of myosin in muscles. Kinesin, a microtubule-based motility protein which may participate in organelle transport and mitosis, binds microtubules in a nucleotide-sensitive manner, and requires hydrolysable nucleotides to translocate microtubules over a glass surface. Recently, neuronal
kinesin
was shown to possess microtubule-activated ATPase activity although coupling between
ATP
hydrolysis and motility was not demonstrated. Here we report that sea urchin egg
kinesin
, prepared either with or without a 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate(AMPPNP)-induced microtubule binding step, also possesses significant microtubule-activated ATPase activity when Mg-
ATP
is used as a substrate. This ATPase activity is inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by addition of Mg-free
ATP
, by chelation of Mg2+ with EDTA, by addition of Na3VO4, or by addition of AMPPNP with or without Mg2+. Addition of these same reagents also inhibits the microtubule-translocating activities of sea urchin egg
kinesin
in a dose-dependent manner, supporting the hypothesis that
kinesin
-driven motility is coupled to the microtubule-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity.
...
PMID:Correlation between the ATPase and microtubule translocating activities of sea urchin egg kinesin. 295 28
Kinesin was prepared from bovine brain as described previously for studies of translocation. A major component of
kinesin
, (116 kDa) was shown to undergo specific photocrosslinking with [alpha-32P]
ATP
, indicating it was an
ATP
-binding polypeptide. A low ATPase activity associated with
kinesin
was stimulated up to 5-fold by microtubules to a specific activity of 14 nmol . min-1 . mg-1. N-Ethylmaleimide inhibited both [alpha-32P]
ATP
binding to the 116 kDa polypeptide and microtubule-stimulated ATPase activity, suggesting that the 116 kDa polypeptide was the catalytic subunit of
kinesin
. Though the ATPase activity associated with
kinesin
is low, it may be sufficient to support motility assuming it is coupled to the velocity of translocation.
...
PMID:Evidence that the 116 kDa component of kinesin binds and hydrolyzes ATP. 295 62
We have found that cytoplasmic extracts from unfertilized sea-urchin eggs contain a prominent microtubule-activated ATPase activity. This activity is induced by polymeric tubulin, but not by tubulin subunits. The activity cosediments with taxol-stabilized microtubules in an
ATP
-independent manner. We have separated the ATPase from cytoplasmic dynein and other ATPases on sucrose gradients. The sedimentation, enzymic and microtubule-binding properties of the microtubule-activated species show it to be distinct from cytoplasmic dynein, myosin and
kinesin
. Since the major function of microtubules in the early sea-urchin embryo is in mitosis, this enzyme represents a new candidate for a role in spindle motility.
...
PMID:Characterization of the sea-urchin egg microtubule-activated ATPase. 295 88
C. elegans contains a microtubule binding protein that resembles both dynein and
kinesin
. This protein has a MgATPase activity and copurifies on both sucrose gradients and DEAE Sephadex columns with a polypeptide of Mr approximately 400 kd. The ATPase activity is 50% inhibited by 10 microM vanadate, 1 mM N-ethyl maleimide, or 5 mM AMP-PNP; it is enhanced 50% by 0.2% Triton. The 400 kd polypeptide is cleaved at a single site by ultraviolet light in the presence of
ATP
and vanadate. In these ways, the protein resembles dynein. The protein also promotes
ATP
-dependent translocation of microtubules or axonemes, "plus" ends trailing. This property is
kinesin
-like; however, the motility is blocked by 5 microM vanadate, 1 mM N-ethyl maleimide, 0.5 mM
ATP
-gamma-S, or by
ATP
-vanadate-UV cleavage of the 400 kd polypeptide, characteristics that differ from
kinesin
. We propose that this protein is a novel microtubule translocator.
...
PMID:Identification of a microtubule-based cytoplasmic motor in the nematode C. elegans. 295 72
Preparations of
kinesin
, a microtubule-based force-producing protein, have been isolated from Drosophila melanogaster embryos by incubation of microtubules with a nonhydrolyzable
ATP
analogue and gel filtration of proteins released from the microtubules by
ATP
. These preparations induced MgATP-dependent microtubule gliding in vitro with a Km for MgATP of 44 microM and a Vmax for gliding of 0.9 micron/sec. Samples of Drosophila proteins that were active in motility assays possessed an average ATPase activity in solution of 17 nmol/min per mg that increased to an average of 106 nmol/min per mg in the presence of microtubules. The major polypeptides that copurified with these activities showed relative molecular masses of 115 kDa and 58 kDa. An antiserum raised against the 115-kDa polypeptide also recognized the 110-kDa component of squid
kinesin
preparations and the 130-kDa component of sea urchin
kinesin
preparations.
...
PMID:Drosophila kinesin: characterization of microtubule motility and ATPase. 296 38
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