4.6 Article

Direct Observation of the Myosin Va Recovery Stroke That Contributes to Unidirectional Stepping along Actin

Journal

PLOS BIOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001031

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Sports, Culture, Science and Technology, Japan
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM071688, F31 DC009143-01]
  3. Yale Institute for Nanoscience and Quantum Engineering
  4. NSF [MCB-0546353]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21000011] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Myosins are ATP-driven linear molecular motors that work as cellular force generators, transporters, and force sensors. These functions are driven by large-scale nucleotide-dependent conformational changes, termed strokes; the power stroke is the force-generating swinging of the myosin light chain-binding neck domain relative to the motor domain head while bound to actin; the recovery stroke is the necessary initial motion that primes, or cocks, myosin while detached from actin. Myosin Va is a processive dimer that steps unidirectionally along actin following a hand over hand mechanism in which the trailing head detaches and steps forward similar to 72 nm. Despite large rotational Brownian motion of the detached head about a free joint adjoining the two necks, unidirectional stepping is achieved, in part by the power stroke of the attached head that moves the joint forward. However, the power stroke alone cannot fully account for preferential forward site binding since the orientation and angle stability of the detached head, which is determined by the properties of the recovery stroke, dictate actin binding site accessibility. Here, we directly observe the recovery stroke dynamics and fluctuations of myosin Va using a novel, transient caged ATP-controlling system that maintains constant ATP levels through stepwise UV-pulse sequences of varying intensity. We immobilized the neck of monomeric myosin Va on a surface and observed real time motions of bead(s) attached site-specifically to the head. ATP induces a transient swing of the neck to the post-recovery stroke conformation, where it remains for similar to 40 s, until ATP hydrolysis products are released. Angle distributions indicate that the post-recovery stroke conformation is stabilized by >= 5 k(B)T of energy. The high kinetic and energetic stability of the post-recovery stroke conformation favors preferential binding of the detached head to a forward site 72 nm away. Thus, the recovery stroke contributes to unidirectional stepping of myosin Va.

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