Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.4.4 (kinesin)
5,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In our studies of human platelets we have detected the presence of the molecular motors kinesin and dynein. Dynein is present at a concentration (0.8 microg/g tissue) that is approximately 1/3 the concentration reported for neuronal tissue. Immunofluorescence microscopy of resting platelets shows that, while platelet microtubules are arranged in coiled hoops forming the marginal band in the cortical region of the platelet, dynein is distributed in a pattern of punctate staining throughout the cytoplasm of the platelets. Fractionation of unactivated platelets shows that dynein partitions to the soluble fraction. Stimulation of platelets with thrombin, ADP or epinephrine causes a partial translocation of dynein from the soluble fraction to the particulate fraction with thrombin being the most efficient agent at promoting this shift. Dynein intermediate chain recovered in the soluble fraction of disrupted platelets following activation displays a transient, time-dependent phosphorylation. In contrast, dynein intermediate chain recovered in the particulate fraction shows decreased phosphorylation. These results indicate that human platelets contain a complex microtubule-based system of motor proteins that is an integral part of the physiological changes occurring during platelet activation.
...
PMID:Activation of human platelets causes post-translational modifications to cytoplasmic dynein. 926 94

The non-claret disjunctional protein (Ncd) is a kinesin-related microtubule motor that moves toward the negative end of microtubules. The kinetic mechanism of the monomer motor domain, residues 335-700, satisfied a simple scheme for the binding of 2'-3'-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl) (MANT) ATP, the hydrolysis step, and the binding and release of MANT ADP, where T, D, and Pi refer to nucleotide triphosphate, nucleotide diphosphate, and inorganic phosphate, respectively, and MtN is the complex of an Ncd motor domain with a microtubule site. Rate constants k1 and k-4 are the rates of a first order step, an isomerization induced by nucleotide binding. The apparent second order rate constants for the binding steps are 1.5 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 for MANT ATP and 3.5 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 for MANT ADP (conditions, 50 mM NaCl, pH 6.9, 21 degrees C). The rate constant of the hydrolysis step (k2) was obtained from quench flow measurements of the phosphate burst phase corrected for the contribution of the rate of product release to the transient rate constant. The rate of phosphate dissociation was not measured; the value was assigned to account for a steady state rate of 3 s-1. The MtN complex is dissociated by ATP at a rate of 10 s-1 based on light scattering measurements. Dissociation constants of Ncd-nucleotide complexes from microtubules increased in the order adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (ATPgammaS) < ADP-AlF4 < ATP < ADP < ADP-vanadate. Comparison of the properties of Ncd with a monomeric kinesin K332 (Ma and Taylor (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 717-723) showed a close similarity, except that the rate constants for the hydrolysis and ADP release steps and the steady state rate are approximately 15-20 times smaller for Ncd. There are two differences that may affect the reaction pathway. The rate of dissociation of MtN by ATP is comparable to the rate of the hydrolysis step, and N.T may dissociate in the cycle, whereas for kinesin, dissociation occurs after hydrolysis. The rate of dissociation of MtN by ADP is larger than the rate of ADP release from MtN.D, whereas for the microtubule-kinesin complex, the rate of dissociation by ADP is smaller than the rate of ADP release. The monomeric Mt.Ncd complex is not processive.
...
PMID:Kinetic mechanism of monomeric non-claret disjunctional protein (Ncd) ATPase. 938 11

Previous studies on the motor enzyme kinesin suggesting that the enzyme molecule tightly binds to a microtubule by only one of its two mechanochemical head domains were performed with multiple kinesin molecules on each microtubule, raising the possibility that interactions between adjacent bound molecules may interfere with the binding of the second head. To characterize the microtubule-bound state of isolated single kinesin molecules, we have measured the rates of nucleotide-induced dissociation of the complex between microtubules and bead-labeled single molecules of the dimeric kinesin derivative K448-BIO using novel single-molecule kinetic methods. Complex dissociation by <2 microM ADP displays an apparent second-order rate constant of 1.2 x 10(4) M-1 s-1. The data suggest that only one of the two heads is bound to the microtubule in the absence of ATP, that binding of a single ADP to the complex is sufficient to induce dissociation, and that even lengthy exposure of kinesin to the microtubule fails to produce significant amounts of a two-head-bound state under the conditions used. The inhibitor adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) induces stochastic pauses in the movement of bead-labeled enzyme molecules in 1 mM ATP. Exit from pauses occurs at 2 s-1 independent of AMP-PNP concentration. The same rate constant is obtained for dissociation of the transient kinesin-microtubule complexes formed in 1 mM ADP, 0.5 mM AMP-PNP, suggesting that release of a single AMP-PNP molecule from the enzyme is the common rate-limiting step of the two processes. The results are consistent with alternating-sites movement mechanisms in which two-head-bound states do not occur in the enzyme catalytic cycle until after ATP binding.
...
PMID:Release of isolated single kinesin molecules from microtubules. 942 99

The dimeric form of the kinesin motor and neck domain from rat brain with bound ADP has been solved by X-ray crystallography. The two heads of the dimer are connected via a coiled-coil alpha-helical interaction of their necks. They are broadly similar to one another; differences are most apparent in the head-neck junction and in a moderate reorientation of the neck helices in order to adopt to the coiled-coil conformation. The heads show a rotational symmetry (approximately 120 degrees) about an axis close to that of the coiled-coil. This arrangement is unexpected since it is not compatible with the microtubule lattice. In this arrangement, the two heads of a kinesin dimer could not have equivalent interactions with microtubules.
...
PMID:The crystal structure of dimeric kinesin and implications for microtubule-dependent motility. 942 21

The processivity of the microtubule-kinesin ATPase has been investigated using stopped-flow kinetic methods to measure the binding of each motor domain of the dimeric kinesin (K401) to the microtubule and the release of the fluorescent ADP analog, 2'(3')-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl)adenosine 5'-diphosphate (mantADP) from the active site of the motor domain. The results show that the release of two molecules of ADP from dimeric kinesin (K401) after the binding of kinesin ADP to the microtubule is a sequential process leading to biphasic kinetics. The maximum rate of release of mantADP from the first motor domain of K401 or monomeric K341 is fast (300 s-1) and independent of added nucleotide. The rate of mantADP release from the second motor domain of K401 is slow in the absence of added nucleotide (0.4 s-1) and reaches a maximum rate of 300 s-1 at saturating concentrations of ATP. High concentrations of ADP stimulate mantADP release from the second head to a maximum rate of 3.8 s-1. The nonhydrolyzable analog AMP-PNP and ATP-gamma S also stimulate ADP release from the second head (maximum rate of 30 s-1), suggesting that ATP hydrolysis is not necessary to stimulate the ADP release. These experiments establish an alternating site mechanism for dimeric kinesin whereby ATP binding to one kinesin active site stimulates the release of ADP from the second site such that the reactions occurring at the active sites of the two monomer units are kept out of phase from each other by interactions between the heads. These results define the steps of the ATPase pathway that lead to the efficient coupling of ATP hydrolysis to force production in a processive reaction whereby force production in forming a tight microtubule complex by one head is coupled to the rate-limiting release of the other head from the microtubule.
...
PMID:Alternating site mechanism of the kinesin ATPase. 945 68

The ATPase mechanism for a monomeric Drosophila kinesin construct, K341, was determined by pre-steady-state kinetic methods and compared to dimeric kinesin, K401. We directly measured the kinetics of binding mantATP (a fluorescent ATP analog) to the microtubule K341 complex, the dissociation of K341 from the microtubule, and release of phosphate and ADP from K341. Measurements of phosphate release kinetics at low salt concentration show that K341 hydrolyzes 18 molecules of ATP per kinesin monomer prior to release from the microtubule. At a higher salt concentration the amplitude of the pre-steady-state burst of phosphate release was reduced to 8 molecules per kinesin monomer. The maximum rate of dissociation of K341 from the microtubule following the addition of ATP was 22 s-1. The rate of mantADP release from the M.K341.mantADP complex increased as a function of tubulin concentration with a second-order rate constant of 11 microM-1 s-1 for K341 binding to the microtubule and reached a maximum rate of mantADP release of 303 s-1. ADP release kinetics were also determined by monitoring the binding of mantATP to K341.ADP and K401.ADP after mixing with microtubules. We show that monomeric kinesin remains associated with the microtubule through multiple rounds of ATP hydrolysis. This apparent processivity implies that one of the functions of the cooperative interaction between the two kinesin heads in dimeric kinesin is for the reactions occurring on one kinesin head to facilitate the release of the adjacent head from the microtubule.
...
PMID:Pathway of ATP hydrolysis by monomeric and dimeric kinesin. 945 69

We used a battery of proteases to probe the footprint of microtubules on kinesin and ncd, and to search for nucleotide-induced conformational changes in these two oppositely-directed yet homologous molecular motors. Proteolytic cleavage sites were identified by N-terminal microsequencing and electrospray mass spectrometry, and then mapped onto the recently-determined atomic structures of ncd and kinesin. In both kinesin and ncd, microtubule binding shields a set of cleavage sites within or immediately flanking the loops L12, L8 and L11 and, in ncd, the loop L2. Even in the absence of microtubules, exchange of ADP for AMPPNP in the motor active site drives conformational shifts involving these loops. In ncd, a chymotryptic cleavage at Y622 in L12 is protected in the strong binding AMPPNP conformation, but cleaved in the weak binding ADP conformation. In kinesin, a thermolysin cleavage at L154 in L8 is protected in AMPPNP but cleaved in ADP. We speculate that ATP turnover in the active site governs microtubule binding by cyclically retracting or displaying the loops L8 and L12. Curiously, the retracted state of the loops corresponds to microtubule strong binding. Conceivably, nucleotide-dependent display of loops works as a reversible block on strong binding.
...
PMID:Proteolytic mapping of kinesin/ncd-microtubule interface: nucleotide-dependent conformational changes in the loops L8 and L12. 946 73

The kinesin family of motor proteins, which contain a conserved motor domain of approximately 350 amino acids, generate movement against microtubules. Over 90 members of this family have been identified, including motors that move toward the minus or plus end of microtubules. The Kar3 protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a minus end-directed kinesin family member that is involved in both nuclear fusion, or karyogamy, and mitosis. The Kar3 protein is 729 residues in length with the motor domain located in the C-terminal 347 residues. Recently, the three-dimensional structures of two kinesin family members have been reported. These structures include the motor domains of the plus end-directed kinesin heavy chain [Kull, F. J., et al. (1996) Nature 380, 550-555] and the minus end-directed Ncd [Sablin, E. P., et al. (1996) Nature 380, 555-559]. We now report the structure of the Kar3 protein complexed with Mg.ADP obtained from crystallographic data to 2.3 A. The structure is similar to those of the earlier kinesin family members, but shows differences as well, most notably in the length of helix alpha 4, a helix which is believed to be involved in conformational changes during the hydrolysis cycle.
...
PMID:X-ray crystal structure of the yeast Kar3 motor domain complexed with Mg.ADP to 2.3 A resolution. 948 2

Displacement of the fluorescent substrate analogue methylanthraniloyl ADP (mant-ADP) from kinesin by excess ATP results in a biphasic fluorescent transient. The pH and microtubule dependence of the rates and amplitudes indicates that the two phases are produced by release of bound mant-ADP, with an excess of the 3'-isomer, followed by the subsequent relaxation of the free 2'- and 3'-isomers to their equilibrium distribution. The first phase for release of mant-ADP is accelerated by microtubules and occurs at the same rate as ADP release measured using [32P]ADP. The second phase is subject to base catalysis and occurs at the same rate as the isomerization of isolated 2'- or 3'-mant-ATP over a 100-fold range of rates. The bound mant-ADP isomers undergo isomerization rapidly when bound to kinesin at pH 8.2, whereas mant-ADP isomers interconvert only slowly when bound to myosin. No fluorescence resonance energy transfer occurs between the single tryptophan in the kinesin neck domain and bound mant-ADP, but efficient energy transfer does occur from protein tyrosine groups. The rate of mant-ADP release in the absence of microtubules is minimal (0.005 s-1) at pH 7-8, 2 mM Mg2+, and 25 mM KCl but is accelerated at lower pH (0.04 s-1 at pH 5.5) and either lower or higher [KCl] (0.01 and 0. 06 s-1 at 0 and 800 mM KCl, respectively). The microtubule-stimulated rate of ADP release is accelerated at low pH and inhibited by high concentrations of monovalent salts. Reduction of the free Mg2+ by addition of excess EDTA increases the release of mant-ADP from E.MgADP to 0.03 s-1. This acceleration at low Mg2+ likely represents sequential release of Mg2+ at 0.03 s-1 followed by rapid release of ADP, as the rate of ADP release from Mg-free E.ADP is fast (>0.5 s-1). At high Mg2+, rebinding of Mg2+ to E.ADP forces release of ADP from the E.MgADP complex at 0.005 s-1.
...
PMID:Interaction of mant-adenosine nucleotides and magnesium with kinesin. 954 60

The structure of an ATP-bound kinesin motor domain is predicted and conformational differences relative to the known ADP-bound form of the protein are identified. The differences should be attributed to force-producing ATP hydrolysis. Candidate ATP-kinesin structures were obtained by simulated annealing, by placement of the ATP gamma-phosphate in the crystal structure of ADP-kinesin, and by interatomic distance constraints. The choice of such constraints was based on mutagenesis experiments, which identified Gly-234 as one of the gamma-phosphate sensing residues, as well as on structural comparison of kinesin with the homologous nonclaret disjunctional (ncd) motor and with G-proteins. The prediction of nucleotide-dependent conformational differences reveals an allosteric coupling between the nucleotide pocket and the microtubule binding site of kinesin. Interactions of ATP with Gly-234 and Ser-202 trigger structural changes in the motor domain, the nucleotide acting as an allosteric modifier of kinesin's microtubule-binding state. We suggest that in the presence of ATP kinesin's putative microtubule binding regions L8, L12, L11, alpha4, alpha5, and alpha6 form a face complementary in shape to the microtubule surface; in the presence of ADP, the microtubule binding face adopts a more convex shape relative to the ATP-bound form, reducing kinesin's affinity to the microtubule.
...
PMID:Nucleotide-dependent movements of the kinesin motor domain predicted by simulated annealing. 967 67


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>