4.8 Article

Stable Kinesin and Dynein Assemblies Drive the Axonal Transport of Mammalian Prion Protein Vesicles

Journal

CELL
Volume 144, Issue 4, Pages 551-565

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2011.01.021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UCSD [P30 NS047101]
  2. NIH-NIA [AG032180]
  3. Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  4. NIH [T32 GM008806, AG000216]
  5. Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation

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Kinesin and dynein are opposite-polarity microtubule motors that drive the tightly regulated transport of a variety of cargoes. Both motors can bind to cargo, but their overall composition on axonal vesicles and whether this composition directly modulates transport activity are unknown. Here we characterize the intracellular transport and steady-state motor subunit composition of mammalian prion protein (PrPC) vesicles. We identify Kinesin-1 and cytoplasmic dynein as major PrPC vesicle motor complexes and show that their activities are tightly coupled. Regulation of normal retrograde transport by Kinesin-1 is independent of dynein-vesicle attachment and requires the vesicle association of a complete Kinesin-1 heavy and light chain holoenzyme. Furthermore, motor subunits remain stably associated with stationary as well as with moving vesicles. Our data suggest a coordination model wherein PrPC vesicles maintain a stable population of associated motors whose activity is modulated by regulatory factors instead of by structural changes to motor-cargo associations.

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