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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 purified a large amount of
dynamin
with high enzymatical activity from rat brain tissue by a new procedure. Dynamin 0.48 mg was obtained from 20 g of rat brain. The purity of
dynamin
was almost 98%. Dynamin plays a role of GTPase rather than ATPase. In the absence of microtubules, Michaelis constant (Km) and maximum velocity (Vmax) for dynamin GTPase were 370 microM and 0.25 min-1, respectively, and in their presence, both were significantly accelerated up to 25 microM and 5.5 min-1. On the other hand, the ATPase activity was very low in the absence of microtubules, and even in their presence, Km and Vmax for
dynamin
ATPase were 0.2 mM and 0.91 min-1. Despite slow GTPase turnover rate in the absence of microtubules, binding of GTP and its nonhydrolizing analogues was very fast, indicating that GTP binding step is not rate limiting. Dynamin did not cause a one-directional consistent microtubule sliding movement just like
kinesin
or dynein in the presence of 2 mM ATP or 2 mM GTP. We observed the molecular structure of
dynamin
with low-angle rotary shadowing technique and revealed that the
dynamin
molecule is globular in shape. Gel filtration assay revealed that these globules were the oligomers of 100-kDa
dynamin
polypeptide. Dynamin bound to microtubules with a 1:1 approximately 1.2 molar ratio in the absence of GTP. Quick-freeze deep-etch electron microscopy of the
dynamin
-microtubule complex showed that
dynamin
decorates the surface of microtubules helically, like a screw bolt, very orderly and tightly with 11.4 +/- 0.9 (SD)nm period. Contrary to the previous report, microtubules make bundles by the attachment of the
dynamin
helixes around each adjacent microtubule, and no cross-bridge formation was observed.
...
PMID:Interaction of dynamin with microtubules: its structure and GTPase activity investigated by using highly purified dynamin. 142 74
It has been thought that motile structures within the cell are driven toward the plus and minus ends of microtubules by the ATPases,
kinesin
and dynein, respectively. Recently obtained data indicate that this model is far too simplistic. Kinesin is now understood to be one representative of a family of proteins. Another member of the
kinesin
family has been found to generate force toward the microtubule minus end. Evidence for either a bidirectional dynein, or closely related retrograde and anterograde forms of dynein has also received potent new support. The discovery of a third potential microtubule motor, the GTPase, '
dynamin
', complicates matters further.
...
PMID:Motor proteins for cytoplasmic microtubules. 153 21
Motor proteins in cells include myosin, which is actin-based, and
kinesin
, dynein and
dynamin
, which are microtubule-based. Several proteins have recently been identified that have amino-acid sequences with similarity to the motor domains of either myosin or
kinesin
, but are otherwise dissimilar. This has led to the suggestion that these may all be motor proteins, but that they are specialized for moving different cargos. Genetic analysis can address the question of the different functions of these new proteins. Studies of a temperature-sensitive mutation (myo2-66) in a gene of the myosin superfamily (MYO2) have implicated the Myo2 protein (Myo2p) in the process of polarized secretion in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). To understand more about the role of Myo2p, we have looked for 'multicopy suppressors' (heterologous genes that, when overexpressed, can correct the temperature sensitivity of the myo2-66 mutant). Here we report the identification of such a suppressor (SMY1) that (surprisingly) encodes a predicted polypeptide sharing sequence similarity with the motor portion of proteins in the
kinesin
superfamily.
...
PMID:Suppression of a myosin defect by a kinesin-related gene. 154 81
We recently identified
dynamin
as a third nucleotide-sensitive microtubule-associated protein in brain tissue, in addition to
kinesin
and cytoplasmic dynein. Molecular cloning analysis has revealed that
dynamin
contains the three consensus elements characteristic of GTP-binding proteins, and biochemical results support a role for GTP in
dynamin
function. Dynamin is also homologous to the Mx proteins, involved in interferon-induced viral resistance, and the product of the yeast VPS1 gene, involved in vacuolar protein sorting. These results identify a novel class of GTP-utilizing proteins, with apparently diverse functions.
...
PMID:Dynamin: a microtubule-associated GTP-binding protein. 183 67
Kinetochore microtubules result from an interaction between astral microtubules and the kinetochore of the chromosomes after breakdown of the nuclear envelope at the end of prophase. In this process, the end of a microtubule projecting from one of the polar regions contacts the primary constriction of a chromosome. The latter then undergoes rapid poleward movement. Concerning the mechanism of anaphase chromosome movement, the motive force for the chromosome-to-pole movement appears to be generated at the kinetochore or in the region very close to it. It has not been determined whether chromosomes propel themselves along stationary kinetochore microtubules by a motor at the kinetochore, or they are pulled poleward by a traction fiber consisting of kinetochore microtubules and associated motors. As chromosomes move poleward coordinate disassembly of kinetochore microtubules might occur from their kinetochore ends. In diatom and yeast spindles, elongation of the spindle in anaphase (anaphase B) may be explained by microtubule assembly at polar microtubule ends in the spindle mid-zone and sliding of the antiparallel microtubules from the opposite poles. The sliding force appears to be generated through an ATP-dependent microtubule motor. In isolated sea urchin spindles, the microtubule assembly at the equator alone might provide the force for spindle elongation, although, in addition, involvement of microtubule sliding by a GTP-requiring mechanochemical enzyme cannot be excluded. Discussions were made on possible participation in anaphase chromosome movement of such microtubule motors as dynein,
kinesin
,
dynamin
and the claret segregation protein.
...
PMID:[Cell division and the microtubular cytoskeleton]. 183 52
Growth cones are intimately involved in determining the direction and extent of neurite elongation during development. They are able to monitor their environment and respond to it by undergoing directed motility. We have isolated a fraction enriched in growth cone particles from embryonic chick brain. Assayed by immunoblots, this fraction is enriched in GAP-43, and contains the cytoskeletal proteins actin, myosin II, neurofilament protein, tubulin,
kinesin
, and
dynamin
. All of the major components of focal adhesions are also present: alpha-actinin, vinculin, talin, and integrin. In addition to integrin, we also identify the cell adhesion molecules A-CAM, L1, fibronectin, and laminin in these particles. This preparation of isolated growth cone particles may be a useful model system for studying growth cone adhesion and motility.
...
PMID:Identification of cytoskeletal, focal adhesion, and cell adhesion proteins in growth cone particles isolated from developing chick brain. 183 41
Two main types of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) have been identified in neuronal cells. The fibrous MAPs, including MAP2 and tau, serve to organize and regulate the assembly of microtubules. A second distinct class of force-producing MAPs, including
kinesin
, dynein and
dynamin
, are involved in microtubule-based movement. These proteins are mechanochemical ATPases which seem to be responsible for the bidirectional transport of organelles and perhaps also the movement of chromosomes. Here we report that MAP2 inhibits microtubule gliding on dynein-coated coverslips, as well as the microtubule-activated ATPase of dynein, indicating that MAP2 and other fibrous MAPs could be important modulators of microtubule-based motility in vivo. By proteolytic modification of tubulin, we found that dynein interacts with microtubules at the C termini of alpha- and beta-tubulin, the regions previously reported to be the sites for the interaction of MAP2. The use of site-directed antibodies implicates a small region of alpha- and beta-tubulin, containing the sequence Glu-Gly-Glu-Glu, as the site of the interaction of dynein and MAP2 with the microtubule.
...
PMID:Interaction of brain cytoplasmic dynein and MAP2 with a common sequence at the C terminus of tubulin. 213 12
The interaction of different protein systems with microtubules is a critical step in the cellular function of these organelles. The family of microtube-associated proteins (MAPs) together with a set of motor proteins such as
kinesin
, cytosolic dynein and
dynamin
are among the most clear examples of microtubule-interacting proteins. In addition, an increasing number of recently discovered proteins have been shown to interact with microtubules, even though they do not remain associated after cycles of assembly and disassembly. By using affinity columns of agarose derivatized with peptides from the C-terminal regulatory domain on tubulin, we found a 90 kDa protein that interacts with tubulin and microtubules. This protein, here designated as Mip-90, was isolated from neuroblastoma N2A and HeLa cells. It was also identified in high-speed supernatants of the neuroblastoma N-115, and non-neuronal cell lines NIH 3T3, Huh-7, HTB-145 and SW-13 vim+. Mip-90 was able to specifically bind to affinity columns of the agarose-bound beta-II(422-434) and beta-II(434-443) tubulin peptides, containing the sequences of MAP binding domains on beta-II-tubulin. Specific antibodies to Mip-90 along with an anti-beta-tubulin antibody used in double immunofluorescence experiments revealed a striking colocalization of this protein with the microtubule network. Nocodazole-treated cells showed significant changes in Mip-90 distribution as correlated to disruption of the microtubule cytoskeleton. On the other hand, Mip-90 colocalized with microtubule bundles with a perinuclear distribution in HeLa cells treated with taxol. The binding of Mip-90 to microtubules was confirmed by cosedimentation experiments. This protein also exhibited a strong affinity for a calmodulin-agarose affinity matrix, and a preparation of Mip-90 isolated by this affinity procedure was able to promote in vitro tubulin assembly into microtubules. The capacity of Mip-90 to interact with microtubules and with calmodulin suggested functional similarities to tau proteins. However, Western blot analysis using a polyclonal antibody against this protein revealed no cross-reactivity of Mip-90 with tau components. In addition, the 90 kDa protein is a thermosensitive protein. On the other hand, site-directed antibodies that recognize a repetitive binding domain on tau, MAP-2 and MAP-4 failed to react with Mip-90. The studies suggest that Mip-90, a microtubule-interacting protein incorporates into microtubules in vitro, and may play a role in modulating microtubule assembly and organization in non-neuronal cells, thus contributing to the regulation of the dynamics of the cytoskeletal network.
...
PMID:Identification of a new microtubule-interacting protein Mip-90. 766 57
In previous studies (Bulinski and Borisy (1979). Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 76, 293-297; Weatherbee et al. (1980). Biochemistry 19, 4116-4123) a microtubule-associated protein (MAP) of M(r) approximately 125,000 was identified as a prominent MAP in HeLa cells. We set out to perform a biochemical characterization of this protein, and to determine its in vitro functions and in vivo distribution. We determined that, like the assembly-promoting MAPs, tau, MAP2 and MAP4, the 125 kDa MAP was both proteolytically sensitive and thermostable. An additional property of this MAP; namely, its unusually tight association with a calcium-insensitive population of MTs in the presence of taxol, was exploited in devising an efficient purification strategy. Because of the MAP's tenacious association with a stable population of MTs, and because it appeared to contribute to the stability of this population of MTs in vitro, we have named this protein ensconsin. We examined the binding of purified ensconsin to MTs; ensconsin exhibited binding that saturated its MT binding sites at an approximate molar ratio of 1:6 (ensconsin:tubulin). Unlike other MAPs characterized to date, ensconsin's binding to MTs was insensitive to moderate salt concentrations (< or = 0.6 M). We further characterized ensconsin in immunoblotting experiments using mouse polyclonal anti-ensconsin antibodies and antibodies reactive with previously described MAPs, such as high molecular mass tau isoforms,
dynamin
, STOP, CLIP-170 and
kinesin
. These experiments demonstrated that ensconsin is distinct from other proteins of similar M(r) that may be present in association with MTs. Immunofluorescence with anti-ensconsin antibodies demonstrated that ensconsin was detectable in association with most or all of the MTs of several lines of human epithelial, fibroblastic and muscle cells; its in vivo properties and distribution, especially in response to drug or other treatments of cells, were found to be different from those of MAP4, the predominant MAP found in these cell types. We conclude that ensconsin, a MAP found in a variety of human cells, is biochemically - and perhaps functionally - distinct from other MAPs present in non-neuronal cells.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of ensconsin, a novel microtubule stabilizing protein. 787 51
The strongest physical correlate with the severity of dementia in Alzheimer's disease and its most rational cause are the loss of neocortical and hippocampal synapses. Evidence, showing that beta-amyloid causes that loss is weak despite the popularity of that hypothesis. Other changes can better explain that damaging phenomenon. Axonal terminals are dependent on axoplasmic flow, and that function requires intact microtubules and the motor proteins
kinesin
, dynein and
dynamin
. It has been known since the earliest electron microscopic studies of AD that neuronal microtubules are lessened in number. Tubules are normally in equilibrium with unpolymerized tubulin, and the stability of the formed elements is dependent on normal binding of tau to the tubule. But, as is well known, tau is abnormally hyperphosphorylated in AD leading to tangle formation and to dissolution of the tubules. Tangles are insufficient in number to account for the cortical loss of neurons and synapses, but hyperphosphorylated tau in the unpolymerized pre-tangle state undoubtedly plays a role. Abnormalities in the motor proteins are now being investigated (some have already been found) and these too would contribute to the loss of synapses in AD by way diminished axoplasmic flow.
...
PMID:The cytoskeleton in Alzheimer disease. 970 Jun 52
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