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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)
The transport of vesicles and the retention of organelles at specific locations are fundamental processes in cells. Actin filaments and myosin motors have been shown to be required for both of these tasks. Most of the organelles in cells associate with actin filaments and some of the myosin motors required for movement on actin filaments have been identified. Myosin V has been shown to transport endoplasmic reticulum (ER) vesicles in neurons, pigment granules in melanocytes, and the vacuole in yeast. Myosin I has been shown to be involved in the transport of Golgi-derived vesicles in epithelial cells. Myosin VI has been shown to be associated with Golgi-derived vesicles, and cytoplasmic vesicles in living Drosophila embryos. Myosin II may be a vesicle motor but its role in vesicle transport has not been resolved. Secretory vesicles, endosomes and mitochondria appear to be transported on actin filaments but the myosin motors on these organelles have not been identified. Mitochondria in yeast may be transported by the dynamic assembly of an actin "tail." The model that has unified all of these findings is the concept that long-range movement of vesicles occurs on microtubules and short-range movement on actin filaments. The details of how the microtubule-dependent and the actin-dependent motors are coordinated are important questions in the field. There is now strong evidence that two molecular motors,
kinesin
and
myosin V
, interact with each other and perhaps function as a complex on vesicles. An understanding of the interrelationship of microtubules and actin filaments and the motors that move cargo on them will ultimately establish how vesicles and organelles are transported to their specific locations in cells.
...
PMID:Vesicle transport: the role of actin filaments and myosin motors. 1052 88
MYO2 encodes a type V myosin heavy chain needed for the targeting of vacuoles and secretory vesicles to the growing bud of yeast. Here we describe new myo2 alleles containing conditional lethal mutations in the COOH-terminal tail domain. Within 5 min of shifting to the restrictive temperature, the polarized distribution of secretory vesicles is abolished without affecting the distribution of actin or the mutant Myo2p, showing that the tail has a direct role in vesicle targeting. We also show that the actin cable-dependent translocation of Myo2p to growth sites does not require secretory vesicle cargo. Although a fusion protein containing the Myo2p tail also concentrates at growth sites, this accumulation depends on the polarized delivery of secretory vesicles, implying that the Myo2p tail binds to secretory vesicles. Most of the new mutations alter a region of the Myo2p tail conserved with vertebrate myosin Vs but divergent from Myo4p, the
myosin V
involved in mRNA transport, and genetic data suggest that the tail interacts with Smy1p, a
kinesin
homologue, and Sec4p, a vesicle-associated Rab protein. The data support a model in which the Myo2p tail tethers secretory vesicles, and the motor transports them down polarized actin cables to the site of exocytosis.
...
PMID:The COOH-terminal domain of Myo2p, a yeast myosin V, has a direct role in secretory vesicle targeting. 1056 81
Myosin V is an unconventional myosin proposed to be processive on actin filaments, analogous to
kinesin
on a microtubule [Mehta, A. D., et al. (1999) Nature (London) 400, 590-593]. To ascertain the unique properties of
myosin V
that permit processivity, we undertook a detailed kinetic analysis of the
myosin V
motor. We expressed a truncated, single-headed
myosin V
construct that bound a single light chain to study its innate kinetics, free from constraints imposed by other regions of the molecule. The data demonstrate that unlike any previously characterized myosin a single-headed
myosin V
spends most of its kinetic cycle (>70%) strongly bound to actin in the presence of ATP. This kinetic tuning is accomplished by increasing several of the rates preceding strong binding to actin and concomitantly prolonging the duration of the strongly bound state by slowing the rate of ADP release. The net result is a myosin unlike any previously characterized, in that ADP release is the rate-limiting step for the actin-activated ATPase cycle. Thus, because of a number of kinetic adaptations,
myosin V
is tuned for processive movement on actin and will be capable of transporting cargo at lower motor densities than any other characterized myosin.
...
PMID:The kinetic mechanism of myosin V. 1057 Jan 40
Movement of melanosomes along melanocyte dendrites is necessary for the transfer of melanin pigment from melanocytes to basal and suprabasal keratinocytes, an event critical to epidermal photoprotection and maintenance of normal skin color. Recent murine data suggest that in melanocyte dendrites the microtubule-associated melanosome movement is bidirectional and that actin-associated
myosin V
secures the peripheral melanosomes, preparing them to be transferred to surrounding keratinocytes. We now report that human melanocytes express high levels of
kinesin
, a molecule that participates in microtubule-associated transport of organelles in other cell types, and that ultrastructurally
kinesin
molecules are closely associated with melanosomes. To determine whether
kinesin
participates in melanosomal transport, cultured melanocytes were treated with sense or antisense oligonucleotides complementary to kinesin heavy chain sequences. Antisense oligonucleotides decreased kinesin protein levels and inhibited the bidirectional movement of the melanosomes, promoting their backward movement. Furthermore, guinea pigs were exposed to ultraviolet B irradiation, known to enhance transport of melanosomes from melanocytes to epidermal keratinocytes, and then were treated with
kinesin
sense or antisense oligonucleotides. The areas that were treated with
kinesin
antisense oligonucleotides showed significantly less pigmentation clinically and histologically than control (sense) oligonucleotide-treated areas. As observed ultrastructurally, in antisense-treated areas melanosomes remained in melanocyte dendrites but over several days were not transferred to the surrounding keratinocytes. Our study supports a major role for
kinesin
in microtubule-associated anterograde melanosomal transport in human melanocyte dendrites.
...
PMID:Kinesin participates in melanosomal movement along melanocyte dendrites. 1069 1
The biochemical cycle of a molecular motor provides the essential link between its thermodynamics and kinetics. The thermodynamics of the cycle determine the motor's ability to perform mechanical work, whilst the kinetics of the cycle govern its stochastic behaviour. We concentrate here on tightly coupled, processive molecular motors, such as
kinesin
and
myosin V
, which hydrolyse one molecule of ATP per forward step. Thermodynamics require that, when such a motor pulls against a constant load f, the ratio of the forward and backward products of the rate constants for its cycle is exp [-(DeltaG + u(0)f)/kT], where -DeltaG is the free energy available from ATP hydrolysis and u(0) is the motor's step size. A hypothetical one-state motor can therefore act as a chemically driven ratchet executing a biased random walk. Treating this random walk as a diffusion problem, we calculate the forward velocity v and the diffusion coefficient D and we find that its randomness parameter r is determined solely by thermodynamics. However, real molecular motors pass through several states at each attachment site. They satisfy a modified diffusion equation that follows directly from the rate equations for the biochemical cycle and their effective diffusion coefficient is reduced to D-v(2)tau, where tau is the time-constant for the motor to reach the steady state. Hence, the randomness of multistate motors is reduced compared with the one-state case and can be used for determining tau. Our analysis therefore demonstrates the intimate relationship between the biochemical cycle, the force-velocity relation and the random motion of molecular motors.
...
PMID:Molecular motors: thermodynamics and the random walk. 1160 75
Analysis of a mutant with altered directionality has led to new insights into motor directionality. The prediction from current models for processivity of a two-heads-bound state has been confirmed by electron microscopy for
myosin V
and by unbinding experiments for
kinesin
. Evidence is emerging that non-processive motors bind their filament with one head, hydrolyze ATP and then release, requiring binding by a second motor to complete a step.
...
PMID:Directionality and processivity of molecular motors. 1179 44
Many cellular components are transported using a combination of the actin- and microtubule-based transport systems. However, how these two systems work together to allow well-regulated transport is not clearly understood. We investigate this question in the Xenopus melanophore model system, where three motors,
kinesin
II, cytoplasmic dynein, and
myosin V
, drive aggregation or dispersion of pigment organelles called melanosomes. During dispersion,
myosin V
functions as a "molecular ratchet" to increase outward transport by selectively terminating dynein-driven minus end runs. We show that there is a continual tug-of-war between the actin and microtubule transport systems, but the microtubule motors
kinesin
II and dynein are likely coordinated. Finally, we find that the transition from dispersion to aggregation increases dynein-mediated motion, decreases
myosin V
--mediated motion, and does not change
kinesin
II--dependent motion. Down-regulation of
myosin V
contributes to aggregation by impairing its ability to effectively compete with movement along microtubules.
...
PMID:Interactions and regulation of molecular motors in Xenopus melanophores. 1186 91
Both experimental evidence and theoretical models for collective effects in the working mechanism of molecular motors are reviewed at three different levels, namely: (i) interaction between the two heads of double-headed motors, particularly in processive motors like
kinesin
,
myosin V
and myosin VI, (ii) cooperative regulation of muscle thin filaments by accessory proteins and the Ca2+ level, and (iii) collective dynamic effects stemming from the mechanical coupling of molecular motors within macroscopic structures such as muscle thick filaments or axonemes. We aim to bridge the gap between structural information at the molecular level and physiological data with accompanying specific models on the one hand, and general stochastic physical models for the action of molecular motors on the other hand. An underlying assumption is that while, ultimately, the function of molecular motors will be explainable by a quantitative description of specific intramolecular dynamics and intermolecular interactions, for some coarse grained larger scale dynamic features it will be sufficient and illuminating to construct physical models that are simplified to the bare essentials.
...
PMID:Cooperative behavior of molecular motors. 1236 88
The motility assay of K. Visscher, M. J. Schnitzer, and S. M. Block (Nature, 400:184-189, 1999) in which the movement of a bead powered by a single
kinesin
motor can be measured is a very useful tool in characterizing the force-dependent steps of the mechanochemical cycle of
kinesin
motors, because in this assay the external force applied to the bead can be controlled (clamped) arbitrarily. However, because the bead is elastically attached to the motor and the response of the clamp is not fast enough to compensate the Brownian motion of the bead, interpretation or analysis of the data obtained from the assay is not trivial. In a recent paper (Y. Chen and B. Yan, Biophys. Chem. 91:79-91, 2001), we showed how to evaluate the mean velocity of the bead and the motor in the motility assay for a given mechanochemical cycle. In this paper we extend the study to the evaluation of the fluctuation or the randomness of the velocity using a Monte Carlo simulation method. Similar to the mean, we found that the randomness of the velocity of the motor is also influenced by the parameters that affect the dynamic behavior of the bead, such as the viscosity of the medium, the size of the bead, the stiffness of the elastic element connecting the bead and the motor, etc. The method presented in this paper should be useful in modeling the kinetic mechanism of any processive motor (such as conventional
kinesin
and
myosin V
) based on measured force-clamp motility data.
...
PMID:Fluctuations and randomness of movement of the bead powered by a single kinesin molecule in a force-clamped motility assay: Monte Carlo simulations. 1241 73
The bi-directional movement of pigment granules in frog melanophores involves the microtubule-based motors cytoplasmic dynein, which is responsible for aggregation, and
kinesin
II and
myosin V
, which are required for dispersion of pigment. It was recently shown that dynactin acts as a link between dynein and
kinesin
II and melanosomes, but it is not fully understood how this is regulated and if more proteins are involved. Here, we suggest that spectrin, which is known to be associated with Golgi vesicles as well as synaptic vesicles in a number of cells, is of importance for melanosome movements in Xenopus laevis melanophores. Large amounts of spectrin were found on melanosomes isolated from both aggregated and dispersed melanophores. Spectrin and two components of the oligomeric dynactin complex, p150(glued) and Arp1/centractin, co-localized with melanosomes during aggregation and dispersion, and the proteins were found to interact as determined by co-immunoprecipitation. Spectrin has been suggested as an important link between cargoes and motor proteins in other cell types, and our new data indicate that spectrin has a role in the specialized melanosome transport processes in frog melanophores, in addition to a more general vesicle transport.
...
PMID:A role for spectrin in dynactin-dependent melanosome transport in Xenopus laevis melanophores. 1514 76
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