Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.6.4.4 (
kinesin
)
5,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Extracts of unfertilized sea urchin eggs contain at least two isoforms of cytoplasmic dynein. One exhibits a weak affinity for microtubules and is primarily soluble. The other isoform, HMr-3, binds to microtubules in an ATP-sensitive manner, but is immunologically distinct from the soluble egg dynein (Porter et al.: Journal of Biological Chemistry 263:6759-6771, 1988). We have now further distinguished these egg dynein isoforms based on differences in NTPase activity. HMr-3 copurifies with NTPase activity, but it hydrolyzes CTP at 10 times the rate of ATP. The soluble egg dynein is similar to flagellar dynein in its nucleotide specificity; its MgCTPase activity is ca. 60% of its MgATPase activity. Non-ionic detergents and
salt
activate the MgATPase activities of both enzymes relative to their MgCTPase activities, but this effect is more pronounced for the soluble egg dynein than for HMr-3. Sucrose gradient-purified HMr-3 promotes an ATP-sensitive microtubule bundling, as seen with darkfield optics. We have also isolated a 20 S microtubule translocating activity by sucrose gradient fractionation of egg extracts, followed by microtubule affinity and ATP release. This 20 S fraction, which contains the HMr-3 isoform, induces a microtubule gliding activity that is distinct from
kinesin
. Our observations suggest that soluble dynein resembles axonemal dynein, but that HMr-2 is related to the dynein-like enzymes isolated from a variety of cell types and may represent the cytoplasmic dynein of sea urchin eggs.
...
PMID:Two distinct isoforms of sea urchin egg dynein. 132 Oct 3
Membrane organella are transported bidirectionally in cells, and the axonal transport system has provided an ideal model system for studying this bidirectional transport. Kinesin and cytoplasmic dynein were identified as candidates for the motor molecules of fast axonal transport, which transport organella along microtubules anterogradely and retrogradely. However, the mechanism that controls this bidirectional transport is unknown. Our previous work revealed that
kinesin
in axons was associated abundantly with anterogradely transported membranous organella, most of which are believed to be precursors of synaptic vesicles and axonal plasma membranes, while the fractions bound to retrogradely transported ones were very small (Hirokawa, N., Sato-Yoshitake, R., Kobayashi, N., Pfister, K. K., Bloom, G. S., and Brady, S. T. (1991) J. Cell Biol. 114, 295-302). Here we demonstrated in vitro that the binding of
kinesin
to synaptic vesicles was concentration-dependent and saturable and could be released by high
salt
concentration. When
kinesin
was phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, its binding to symaptic vesicles was significantly reduced. By motility assay and by statistical analysis using electron microscopy, we further revealed that synaptic vesicles preincubated with phosphorylated
kinesin
associated less frequently with microtubules than synaptic vesicles preincubated with unphosphorylated
kinesin
. The phosphorylation of
kinesin
should therefore play an essential role in regulating the direction of fast axonal transport by inhibiting its binding to membrane organella, thus releasing it from membrane organella at nerve terminals.
...
PMID:The phosphorylation of kinesin regulates its binding to synaptic vesicles. 142 30
We examined the ability of
kinesin
to support the movement of adrenal medullary chromaffin granules on microtubules in a defined in vitro system. We found that
kinesin
and ATP are all that is required to support efficient (33% vesicle motility) and rapid (0.4-0.6 micron/s) translocation of secretory granule membranes on microtubules in the presence of a low-
salt
motility buffer. Kinesin also induced the formation of microtubule asters in this buffer, with the plus ends of microtubules located at the center of each aster. This observation indicates that
kinesin
is capable of promoting active sliding between microtubules toward their respective plus ends, a movement analogous to that of anaphase b in the mitotic spindle. The fact that vesicle translocation, microtubule sliding, and microtubule-dependent
kinesin
ATPase activities are all enhanced in low-
salt
buffer establishes a functional parallel between this translocator and other motility ATPases, myosin, and dynein.
...
PMID:Purified kinesin promotes vesicle motility and induces active sliding between microtubules in vitro. 183 Jun 66
Microtubule (MT)-binding peptides have been detected in homogenates of bovine brain tissue utilizing a blot overlay assay. Blots were prepared by the electrophoretic transfer to nitrocellulose of proteins separated on polyacrylamide gels. These blots were incubated with taxol stabilized MTs or tubulin, rinsed, and then fixed by air drying. About 17 soluble MT-associated proteins (MAPs) were identified by immunodetection of bound tubulin, including MAP2,
kinesin
, and tau. The interaction of MTs with these peptides appears to be specific, since MT binding can be displaced by a fluorescent tubulin analog, is competitively inhibited by the addition of exogenous brain MAPs, is decreased by raising the
salt
concentration, and is diminished by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) denaturation. Only one protein (150 kDa) appears to have an interaction with MTs that is stable in high
salt
. The specificity of the binding on blots is further illustrated by the interaction of MTs with the MT-binding domains of MAP2 (32-35 kDa fragments) and
kinesin
(64 kDa fragment). Specific MT-binding peptides or domains can thus be isolated and characterized with this method, which requires little protein and is suitable for use with proteins that are either soluble or insoluble under physiological conditions.
...
PMID:Blot overlay identification of microtubule-binding peptides from bovine brain. 238 8
The molecular structure of bovine adrenal
kinesin
was studied by electron microscopy using the low-angle rotary shadowing technique. Adrenal
kinesin
exhibited either a folded or an extended configuration; the ratio of the two is dependent on the
salt
concentration. Almost all adrenal
kinesin
molecules were folded in a low-ionic solution, and the ratio of extended molecules increased to 40-50% in a solution containing 1 M ammonium acetate. Kinesin in the extended configuration displayed a rod-shaped structure with a mean length of about 80 nm. The morphologies of the ends were different; one end was composed of two globular particles, similar to the two-headed structure of myosin, while the other end had a more ill-defined structure, appearing either as a globular particle, an aggregate of two to four small granules, or a frayed, fan-like structure. The folded
kinesin
molecule possessed a hinge region in the middle of the rod, at about 32 nm from the neck of the two heads. In our preparations, the majority of adrenal
kinesin
molecules were folded at physiological
salt
concentrations. Adrenal
kinesin
bound to microtubules in the presence of adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) also displayed a folded morphology.
...
PMID:The molecular structure of adrenal medulla kinesin. 249 94
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
Axoplasmic vesicles were purified and observed to translocate on isolated microtubules in an ATP-dependent, trypsin-sensitive manner, implying that ATP-binding polypeptides essential for force generation were present on the vesicle surface. To identify these proteins [alpha 32P]8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate ([alpha 32P]8-N3ATP), a photoaffinity analogue of ATP, was used. The results presented here identify and characterize a vesicle-associated polypeptide having a relative molecular mass of 292 kD that bound [alpha 32P]8-N3ATP. The incorporation of label is ultraviolet light-dependent and ATP-sensitive. Moreover, the 292-kD polypeptide could be isolated in association with vesicles or microtubules, depending on the conditions used, and the data indicate that the 292-kD polypeptide is similar to mammalian brain microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP 2) for the following reasons: The 292-kD polypeptide isolated from either squid axoplasm or optic lobe cross-reacts with antiserum to porcine brain MAP 2. Furthermore, it purifies with taxol-stabilized microtubules and is released with
salt
. Based on these characteristics, the 292-kD polypeptide is distinct from the known force-generating molecules myosin and flagellar dynein, as well as the 110-130-kD
kinesin
-like polypeptides that have recently been described (Brady, S. T., 1985, Nature (Lond.), 317:73-75; Vale, R. D., T. S. Reese, and M. P. Sheetz, 1985b, Cell, 42:39-50; Scholey, J. M., M. E. Porter, P. M. Grissom, and J. R. McIntosh, 1985, Nature (Lond.), 318:483-486). Because the 292-kD polypeptide binds ATP and is associated with vesicles that translocate on purified MAP-free microtubules in an ATP-dependent fashion, it is therefore believed to be involved in vesicle-microtubule interactions that promote organelle motility.
...
PMID:Identification of a MAP 2-like ATP-binding protein associated with axoplasmic vesicles that translocate on isolated microtubules. 309 8
Kinesin is a force-generating ATPase that drives the sliding movement of microtubules on glass coverslips and the movement of plastic beads along microtubules. Although
kinesin
is suspected to participate in microtubule-based organelle transport, the exact role it plays in this process is unclear. To address this question, we have developed a quantitative assay that allows us to determine the ability of soluble factors to promote organelle movement. Salt-washed organelles from squid axoplasm exhibited a nearly undetectable level of movement on purified microtubules. Their frequency of movement could be increased greater than 20-fold by the addition of a high speed axoplasmic supernatant. Immunoadsorption of
kinesin
from this supernatant decreased the frequency of organelle movement by more than 70%; organelle movements in both directions were markedly reduced. Surprisingly, antibody purified
kinesin
did not promote organelle movement either by itself or when it was added back to the
kinesin
-depleted supernatant. This result suggested that other soluble factors necessary for organelle movement were removed along with
kinesin
during immunoadsorption of the supernatant. A high level of organelle motor activity was recovered in a high
salt
eluate of the immunoadsorbent that contained only little
kinesin
. On the basis of these results we propose that organelle movement on microtubules involves other soluble axoplasmic factors in addition to
kinesin
.
...
PMID:The role of kinesin and other soluble factors in organelle movement along microtubules. 314 29
Studies of immobilized
kinesin
have shown that a single dimeric molecule can maintain contact with and drive sliding of a microtubule. In solution, however, native
kinesin
binds microtubules too weakly and hydrolyses ATP too slowly to produce the high sliding velocities seen in motility assay. This apparent inhibition in solution appears to be caused by the binding of
kinesin
's tail domains to its motor (head) domains in a folded conformation. DKH392, a construct containing two heads but no tails, has been shown to display both tight binding to microtubules and high ATPase rates. Furthermore, it retains one molecule of ADP per dimer when bound to microtubules, which could facilitate a 'hand-over-hand' mechanism for processive motion. Here we show that DKH392 hydrolyses more than 100 ATP molecules per diffusional encounter with a microtubule, even in the high-
salt
conditions encountered physiologically. This provides direct evidence that
kinesin
's activity is highly processive, with the motor remaining attached to a microtubule through many cycles of ATP hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Highly processive microtubule-stimulated ATP hydrolysis by dimeric kinesin head domains. 756 25
A 100-kDa polypeptide with microtubule-interacting properties was identified in a Golgi vesicle-enriched fraction from Corylus avellana pollen. The k71s23 antibody (directed to the kinesin heavy chain from bovine brain) [Tiezzi et al., 1992: Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 21:132-137] localized the polypeptide on the external surface of membrane-bounded organelles. Some 100-kDa-containing vesicles copelleted with microtubules (polymerized from purified bovine brain tubulin) either in presence or absence of 5 mM AMPPNP, but they could be released by 10 mM ATP or 0.5 M KCl. The pollen microtubule-interacting protein,
salt
-extracted from membranes and partially purified by gel filtration, exhibited an ATPase activity (16.2 nmolPi/mg/min) which could be stimulated about 2-fold (32.5 nmolPi/mg/min) by addition of bovine brain microtubules. We suppose that the 100-kDa polypeptide is part of a molecular complex showing properties of the
kinesin
class.
...
PMID:Kinesin-related polypeptide is associated with vesicles from Corylus avellana pollen. 782 Aug 65
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>