4.5 Article

A cool look at the structural changes in kinesin motor domains

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 120, Issue 22, Pages 3919-3927

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.016931

Keywords

cryo-electron microscopy; image reconstruction; microtubule motors

Categories

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [MC_U105184313, U.1051.04.002(78842)] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Medical Research Council [MC_U105184313] Funding Source: researchfish
  3. MRC [MC_U105184313] Funding Source: UKRI

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Recently, several 3D images of kinesin-family motor domains interacting with microtubules have been obtained by analysis of electron microscope images of frozen hydrated complexes at much higher resolutions (9-12 angstrom) than in previous reports (15-30 angstrom). The high-resolution maps show a complex interaction interface between kinesin and tubulin, in which kinesin's switch II helix alpha 4 is a central feature. Differences due to the presence of ADP, as compared with ATP analogues, support previously determined crystal structures of kinesins alone in suggesting that alpha 4 is part of a pathway linking the nucleotide-binding site and the neck that connects to cargo. A 3D structure of the microtubule-bound Kar3 motor domain in a nucleotide-free state has revealed dramatic changes not yet reported for any crystal structure, including melting of the switch II helix, that may be part of the mechanism by which information is transmitted. A nucleotide-dependent movement of helix alpha 6, first seen in crystal structures of Kif1a, appears to bring it into contact with tubulin and may provide another communication link. A microtubule-induced movement of loop L7 and a related distortion of the central beta-sheet, detected only in the empty state, may also send a signal to the region of the motor core that interacts with the neck. Earlier images of a kinesin-1 dimer in the empty state, showing a close interaction between the two motor heads, can now be interpreted in terms of a communication route from the active site of the directly bound head via its central beta-sheet to the tethered head.

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