The Kinesin-5 Tail Domain Directly Modulates the Mechanochemical Cycle of the Motor for Anti-Parallel Microtubule Sliding

Autor: Pedro Gutierrez, Larisa Gheber, Jawdat Al-Bassam, Stanley Nithianantham, Scott Forth, Alex F. Thompson, Elizabeth M. Wilson-Kubalek, Jason Stumpff, Ronald A. Milligan, Tatyana Bodrug, Steven S. Rosenfeld, Ignas Gaska, Sayaka Inagaki, Charles V. Sindelar, Jennifer Major, Richard J. McKenney, April Alfieri, Garrett Debs
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
DOI: 10.1101/713909
Popis: Kinesin-5 motors organize mitotic spindles by sliding apart anti-parallel microtubules. They are homotetramers composed of two antiparallel dimers placing orthogonal motor and tail domains at opposite ends of a bipolar minifilament. Here, we describe a regulatory mechanism, involving direct binding of the tail to motor domain and reveal its fundamental role in microtubule sliding motility. Biochemical analyses reveal that the tail down-regulates microtubule-activated ATP hydrolysis by specifically engaging the motor in the nucleotide-free or ADP-bound states. Cryo-EM structures reveal that the tail stabilizes a unique conformation of the motor N-terminal subdomain opening its active site. Full-length kinesin-5 motors undergo slow motility and cluster together along microtubules, while tail-deleted motors exhibit rapid motility without clustering along microtubules. The tail is critical for motors to zipper together two microtubules by generating substantial forces within sliding zones. The tail domain is essential for kinesin-5 mitotic spindle localization in vivo, which becomes severely reduced when the tail is deleted. Our studies suggest a revised microtubule-sliding model, in which tail domains directly engage motor domains at both ends of kinesin-5 homotetramers enhancing stability of the dual microtubule-bound states leading to slow motility yet high force production.
Databáze: OpenAIRE