TY - JOUR
T1 - A physical model reveals the mechanochemistry responsible for Dynein's processive motion
AU - Tsygankov, Denis
AU - Serohijos, Adrian W R
AU - Dokholyan, Nikolay
AU - Elston, Timothy C.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grants R01HL077546-03 and R01GM079271 to T.E., and grant R01GM080742 and American Recovery and Reinvestment Act supplement GM080742-03S1 to N.D.).
PY - 2011/7/6
Y1 - 2011/7/6
N2 - The molecular motor dynein is associated with various cellular activities, such as directed transport along microtubules and the rhythmic beating of the axoneme. Because of the size and complexity of the protein, a detailed understanding of the mechanochemistry that drives dynein's processive motion is lacking. To overcome this deficiency, we developed the first (to our knowledge) computational model for two-headed dynein that couples conformational changes of the motor's subunits to the biochemical steps involved in ATP hydrolysis. Analysis of the model provides what we believe are several novel insights into how the protein functions: 1), structural constraints limit the motion of the free microtubule binding domain to one dimension, increasing the efficiency with which this domain finds a binding site; 2), in addition to the power stroke of the bound head, recovery of the free head to a pre-power-stroke conformation is required for this head to reach a forward binding site; 3), the order in which the power stroke and recovery transitions occur affects the probability of back-stepping; and 4), the existence of multiple equilibria in the motor's bending energy provides a mechanism for processive back-stepping. To the best of our knowledge, our computational model provides the first complete mechanochemical description of the motor protein dynein, and the findings presented here should motivate new experimental investigations to test its predictions.
AB - The molecular motor dynein is associated with various cellular activities, such as directed transport along microtubules and the rhythmic beating of the axoneme. Because of the size and complexity of the protein, a detailed understanding of the mechanochemistry that drives dynein's processive motion is lacking. To overcome this deficiency, we developed the first (to our knowledge) computational model for two-headed dynein that couples conformational changes of the motor's subunits to the biochemical steps involved in ATP hydrolysis. Analysis of the model provides what we believe are several novel insights into how the protein functions: 1), structural constraints limit the motion of the free microtubule binding domain to one dimension, increasing the efficiency with which this domain finds a binding site; 2), in addition to the power stroke of the bound head, recovery of the free head to a pre-power-stroke conformation is required for this head to reach a forward binding site; 3), the order in which the power stroke and recovery transitions occur affects the probability of back-stepping; and 4), the existence of multiple equilibria in the motor's bending energy provides a mechanism for processive back-stepping. To the best of our knowledge, our computational model provides the first complete mechanochemical description of the motor protein dynein, and the findings presented here should motivate new experimental investigations to test its predictions.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.bpj.2011.05.043
DO - 10.1016/j.bpj.2011.05.043
M3 - Article
C2 - 21723824
AN - SCOPUS:80052511038
SN - 0006-3495
VL - 101
SP - 144
EP - 150
JO - Biophysical journal
JF - Biophysical journal
IS - 1
ER -