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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)
We have used site-directed spin-labeling and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to monitor a conformational change at the nucleotide site of
kinesin
. Cys-lite
kinesin
(K349 monomer) with the mutation S188C was spin labeled with MSL or MTSL. This residue is at the junction between the switch 1 region (which is a structure known to be sensitive to bound nucleotide in the G-proteins) and the alpha3-helix, adjacent to the nucleotide site. The spectra showed two or more components of mobility, which were independent of nucleotide in the absence of microtubules (MTs). The spectra of both labels showed a change of mobility upon binding to MTs. A more mobile spectral component became enhanced for all triphosphate analogs examined, AMPPNP,
ADP
.AlFx, or
ADP
.BeFx, in the presence of MTs, although the magnitude of the new component and the degree of mobility varied with nucleotide analog. The
ADP
state showed a much-reduced spectral change with a small shift to the more immobilized component in the presence of MTs. For
kinesin
.
ADP
.MT, a van't Hoff plot gave DeltaH degrees = -96 kJ/mol implying that the conformational change was extensive. We conclude there is a conformational change in the switch 1-alpha3-helix domain when
kinesin
binds to MTs.
...
PMID:EPR spectroscopy shows a microtubule-dependent conformational change in the kinesin switch 1 domain. 1271 48
We have used
adenosine diphosphate
analogs containing electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin moieties and EPR spectroscopy to show that the nucleotide-binding site of
kinesin
-family motors closes when the motor.diphosphate complex binds to microtubules. Structural analyses demonstrate that a domain movement in the switch 1 region at the nucleotide site, homologous to domain movements in the switch 1 region in the G proteins [heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding proteins], explains the EPR data. The switch movement primes the motor both for the free energy-yielding nucleotide hydrolysis reaction and for subsequent conformational changes that are crucial for the generation of force and directed motion along the microtubule.
...
PMID:Closing of the nucleotide pocket of kinesin-family motors upon binding to microtubules. 1273 Jun 1
Switch I and II are key active site structural elements of kinesins, myosins, and G-proteins. Our analysis of a switch I mutant (R210A) in Drosophila melanogaster
kinesin
showed a reduction in microtubule affinity, a loss in cooperativity between the motor domains, and an ATP hydrolysis defect leading to aberrant detachment from the microtubule. To investigate the conserved arginine in switch I further, a lysine substitution mutant was generated. The R210K dimeric motor has lost the ability to hydrolyze ATP; however, it has rescued microtubule function. Our results show that R210K has restored microtubule association kinetics, microtubule affinity,
ADP
release kinetics, and motor domain cooperativity. Moreover, the active site at head 1 is able to distinguish ATP,
ADP
, and AMP-PNP to signal head 2 to bind the microtubule and release mantADP with kinetics comparable with wild-type. Therefore, the structural pathway of communication from head 1 to head 2 is restored, and head 2 can respond to this signal by binding the microtubule and releasing mantADP. Structural modeling revealed that lysine could retain some of the hydrogen bonds made by arginine but not all, suggesting a structural hypothesis for the ability of lysine to rescue microtubule function in the Arg210 mutant.
...
PMID:A kinesin switch I arginine to lysine mutation rescues microtubule function. 1286 Sep 92
To understand the mechanism of
kinesin
movement we have investigated the relative configuration of the two
kinesin
motor domains during ATP hydrolysis using fluorescence polarization microscopy of ensemble and single molecules. We found that: (i) in nucleotide states that induce strong microtubule binding, both motor domains are bound to the microtubule with similar orientations; (ii) this orientation is maintained during processive motion in the presence of ATP; (iii) the neck-linker region of the motor domain has distinct configurations for each nucleotide condition tested. Our results fit well with a hand-over-hand type movement mechanism and suggest how the ATPase cycle in the two motor domains is coordinated. We propose that the motor neck-linker domain configuration controls
ADP
release.
...
PMID:Configuration of the two kinesin motor domains during ATP hydrolysis. 1297 Jul 55
Molecular motors undergo conformational changes to produce force and move along cytoskeletal filaments. Structural changes have been detected in
kinesin
motors; however, further changes are expected because previous crystal structures are in the same or closely related conformations. We report here a 2.5 A crystal structure of the minus-end
kinesin
, Ncd, with the coiled-coil stalk/neck and one head rotated by approximately 75 degrees relative to the other head. The two heads are asymmetrically positioned with respect to the stalk and show asymmetry of nucleotide state: one head is fully occupied, but the other is unstably bound to
ADP
. Unlike previous structures, our new atomic model can be fit into cryoelectron microscopy density maps of the motor attached to microtubules, where it appears to resemble a one-head-bound motor with the stalk rotated towards the minus end. Interactions between neck and motor core residues, observed in the head that moves with the stalk, are disrupted in the other head, permitting rotation of the stalk/neck. The rotation could represent a force-producing stroke that directs the motor to the minus end.
...
PMID:Rotation of the stalk/neck and one head in a new crystal structure of the kinesin motor protein, Ncd. 1453 11
A series of modifications of the junction of the neck linker and neck coil of dimeric Drosophila
kinesin
were constructed to determine the influence of head orientation and spacing on the ATPase kinetics. Ala(345) is the first residue in the coiled-coil of the neck, and its replacement with glycine or proline produces no significant change in the k(cat) or K(0.5(MT)) values for activation of their ATPase by microtubules (MTs) or in their k(bi(ratio)) value for the average number of ATP molecules hydrolyzed during a processive encounter with a MT. Addition or deletion of a single amino acid at the junction produces only modest changes with less than a 2-fold reduction in kinetic processivity. Insertion of a spacer of 6 or 12 additional amino acids at the neck linker junction increases the K(0.5(MT)) value by 3-4-fold with a corresponding decrease in kinetic processivity. The sliding velocities of all the mutant constructs under multimotor conditions are within 30% of the wild-type value. All the constructs with single residue changes exhibit half-site
ADP
release on binding to MTs. The constructs with long insertion, however, rapidly release both
ADP
molecules per dimer on binding to a MT, indicating that the steric constraints that prevent release of
ADP
from the tethered head of wild-type
kinesin
have been relieved by the long insertions. The constructs with long inserts have decreased kinetic processivity and dissociate from the MT during ATP hydrolysis 3-fold faster than wild-type.
...
PMID:Modulation of kinesin half-site ADP release and kinetic processivity by a spacer between the head groups. 1455 32
Competing models for the coordination of processive stepping in
kinesin
can be tested by introducing a roadblock to prevent lead head attachment. We used T93N, an irreversibly binding mutant monomer, as a roadblock, and measured the rates of nucleotide-induced detachment of
kinesin
monomers or dimers with and without the T93N roadblock using microflash photolysis combined with stopped flow. Control nucleotide-induced monomer (rK340) unbinding was 73.6 s(-1) for ATP and 40.5 s(-1) for
ADP
. Control
ADP
-induced dimer (rK430) unbinding was 18.6 s(-1). Added 20 mM Pi slowed both monomer and dimer unbinding. With the roadblock in place, lead head attachment of dimers is prevented and ATP-induced trail head unbinding was then 42 s(-1). This is less than two-fold slower than the stepping rate of unimpeded rK430 dimers (50-70 s(-1)), indicating that during walking, lead head attachment induces at most only a slight (less than two-fold) acceleration of trail head detachment. As we discuss, this implies a coordination model having very fast (>2000 s(-1)) ATP-induced attachment of the lead head, followed by slower, strain-sensitive
ADP
release from the lead head.
...
PMID:What kinesin does at roadblocks: the coordination mechanism for molecular walking. 1468 58
The motor protein
kinesin
couples a temporally periodic chemical cycle (the hydrolysis of ATP) to a spatially periodic mechanical cycle (movement along a microtubule). To distinguish between different models of such chemical-to-mechanical coupling, we measured the speed of movement of conventional
kinesin
along microtubules in in vitro motility assays over a wide range of substrate (ATP) and product (
ADP
and inorganic phosphate) concentrations. In the presence and absence of products, the dependence of speed on [ATP] was well described by the Michaelis-Menten equation. In the absence of products, the K(M) (the [ATP] required for half-maximal speed) was 28 +/- 1 microM, and the maximum speed was 904 nm/s. P(i) behaved as a competitive inhibitor with K(I) = 9 +/- 1 mM.
ADP
behaved approximately as a competitive inhibitor with K(I) = 35 +/- 2 microM. The data were compared to four-state kinetic models in which changes in nucleotide state are coupled to chemical and/or mechanical changes. We found that the deviation from competitive inhibition by
ADP
was inconsistent with models in which P(i) is released before
ADP
. This is surprising because all known ATPases (and GTPases) with high structural similarity to the motor domains of
kinesin
release P(i) before
ADP
(or GDP). Our result is therefore inconsistent with models, such as one-headed and inchworm mechanisms, in which the hydrolysis cycle takes place on one head only. However, it is simply explained by hand-over-hand models in which
ADP
release from one head precedes P(i) release from the other.
...
PMID:Inhibition of kinesin motility by ADP and phosphate supports a hand-over-hand mechanism. 1473 13
The flexible tubulin C-terminal tails (CTTs) have recently been implicated in the walking mechanism of dynein and
kinesin
. To address their role in the case of conventional
kinesin
, we examined the structure of
kinesin
-microtubule (MT) complexes before and after CTT cleavage by subtilisin. Our results show that the CTTs directly modulate the motor-tubulin interface and the binding properties of motors. CTT cleavage increases motor binding stability, and
kinesin
appears to adopt a binding conformation close to the nucleotide-free configuration under most nucleotide conditions. Moreover, C-terminal cleavage results in trapping a transient motor-
ADP
-MT intermediate. Using SH3-tagged dimeric and monomeric constructs, we could also show that the position of the
kinesin
neck is not affected by the C-terminal segments of tubulin. Overall, our study reveals that the tubulin C-termini define the stability of the MT-
kinesin
complex in a nucleotide-dependent manner, and highlights the involvement of tubulin in the regulation of weak and strong
kinesin
binding states.
...
PMID:Modulation of kinesin binding by the C-termini of tubulin. 1497 55
We have studied the structure of microtubules decorated with
kinesin
motor domains in different nucleotide states by 3D electron microscopy. Having docked the atomic coordinates of both dimeric
ADP
.
kinesin
and tubulin heterodimer into a map of
kinesin
dimers bound to microtubules in the presence of
ADP
, we try to predict which regions of the proteins interact in the weakly binding state. When either the presence of 5'-adenylyimidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) or an absence of nucleotides puts motor domains into a strongly-bound state, the 3D maps show changes in the motor domains which modify their interaction with beta-tubulin. The maps also show differences in beta-tubulin conformation compared with undecorated microtubules or those decorated with weakly-bound motors. Strongly-bound ncd appears to produce an identical change.
...
PMID:3D electron microscopy of the interaction of kinesin with tubulin. 1521 83
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