4.8 Article

The Tail of Kinesin-14a in Giardia Is a Dual Regulator of Motility

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 18, Pages 3664-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.090

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [MCB-1616462, MCB-1617019]
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM127922, GM076476]
  3. National Cancer Institute [F99CA223018]

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Kinesin-14s are microtubule-based motor proteins that play important roles in mitotic spindle assembly [1]. Ncd-type kinesin-14s are a subset of kinesin-14 motors that exist as homodimers with an N-terminal microtubule-binding tail, a coiled-coil central stalk (central stalk), a neck, and two identical C-terminal motor domains. To date, no Ncd-type kinesin-14 has been found to naturally exhibit long-distance minus-end-directed processive motility on single microtubules as individual homodimers. Here, we show that GiKIN14a from Giardia intestinalis [2] is an unconventional Ncd-type kinesin-14 that uses its N-terminal microtubule-binding tail to achieve minus-end-directed processivity on single microtubules over micrometer distances as a homodimer. We further find that although truncation of the N-terminal tail greatly reduces GiKIN14a processivity, the resulting tailless construct GiKIN14a-Delta tail is still a minimally processive motor and moves its center of mass via discrete 8-nm steps on the microtubule, In addition, full-length GiKIN14a has significantly higher stepping and ATP hydrolysis rates than does GiKIN14a-Delta tail. Inserting a flexible polypeptide linker into the central stalk of full-length GiKIN14a nearly reduces its ATP hydrolysis rate to that of GiKIN14a-Delta tail. Collectively, our results reveal that the N-terminal tail of GiKIN14a is a de facto dual regulator of motility and reinforce the notion of the central stalk as a key mechanical determinant of kinesin-14 motility [3].

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