Background: Kinesin-3 family motors drive diverse cellular processes and have significant clinical importance. The ATPase cycle is integral to the processive motility of kinesin motors to drive long-distance intracellular transport. Our previous work has demonstrated that kinesin-3 motors are fast and superprocessive with high microtubule affinity. However, chemomechanics of these motors remain poorly understood.
Results: We purified kinesin-3 motors using the Sf9-baculovirus expression system and demonstrated that their motility properties are on par with the motors expressed in mammalian cells. Using biochemical analysis, we show for the first time that kinesin-3 motors exhibited high ATP turnover rates, which is 1.3- to threefold higher compared to the well-studied kinesin-1 motor. Remarkably, these ATPase rates correlate to their stepping rate, suggesting a tight coupling between chemical and mechanical cycles. Intriguingly, kinesin-3 velocities (KIF1A > KIF13A > KIF13B > KIF16B) show an inverse correlation with their microtubule-binding affinities (KIF1A < KIF13A < KIF13B < KIF16B). We demonstrate that this differential microtubule-binding affinity is largely contributed by the positively charged residues in loop8 of the kinesin-3 motor domain. Furthermore, microtubule gliding and cellular expression studies displayed significant microtubule bending that is influenced by the positively charged insert in the motor domain, K-loop, a hallmark of kinesin-3 family.
Conclusions: Together, we propose that a fine balance between the rate of ATP hydrolysis and microtubule affinity endows kinesin-3 motors with distinct mechanical outputs. The K-loop, a positively charged insert in the loop12 of the kinesin-3 motor domain promotes microtubule bending, an interesting phenomenon often observed in cells, which requires further investigation to understand its cellular and physiological significance.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12915-022-01370-8 | DOI Listing |
Nat Struct Mol Biol
January 2025
Centre for Mechanochemical Cell Biology and Warwick Biomedical Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Cellular cargos move bidirectionally on microtubules by recruiting opposite polarity motors dynein and kinesin. These motors show codependence, where one requires the activity of the other, although the mechanism is unknown. Here we show that kinesin-3 KIF1C acts as both an activator and a processivity factor for dynein, using in vitro reconstitutions of human proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
December 2024
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA.
Bidirectional cargo transport by kinesin and dynein is essential for cell viability and defects are linked to neurodegenerative diseases. The competition between motors is described as a tug-of-war, and computational modeling suggests that the load-dependent off-rate is the strongest determinant of which motor 'wins'. Optical tweezer experiments find that the load-dependent detachment sensitivity of transport kinesins is kinesin-3 > kinesin-2 > kinesin-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Dis
December 2024
National Tsing Hua University, Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Department of Life Science, Hsinchu 30013, Taiwan, ROC. Electronic address:
Kinesin-3 KIF1A (UNC-104 in C. elegans) is the major axonal transporter of synaptic vesicles and mutations in this molecular motor are linked to KIF1A-associated neurological disorders (KAND), encompassing Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and hereditary spastic paraplegia. UNC-104 binds to lipid bilayers of synaptic vesicles via its C-terminal PH (pleckstrin homology) domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Virol
December 2024
Department of Developmental and Molecular Biology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
Unlabelled: Following reactivation of a latent alphaherpesvirus infection, viral particles are assembled in neuronal cell bodies, trafficked anterogradely within axons to nerve termini, and spread to adjacent epithelial cells. The virally encoded membrane proteins US9p and the glycoprotein heterodimer gE/gI of pseudorabies virus (PRV) and herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) play critical roles in anterograde spread, likely as a tripartite gE/gI-US9p complex. Two kinesin motors, kinesin-1 and kinesin-3, are implicated in the egress of these viruses, but how gE/gI-US9p coordinates their activities is poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiophys J
November 2024
Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai, Miyagi, Japan; Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Sciences (FRIS), Tohoku University, Aramaki-Aoba 6-3, Sendai, Miyagi, Japan. Electronic address:
Most kinesin molecular motors dimerize to move processively and efficiently along microtubules; however, some can maintain processivity even in a monomeric state. Previous studies have suggested that asymmetric potentials between the motor domain and microtubules underlie this motility. In this study, we demonstrate that the kinesin-3 family motor protein KLP-6 can move forward along microtubules as a monomer upon release of autoinhibition.
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