TY - JOUR
T1 - The mechanochemical cycle of mammalian kinesin-2 KIF3A/B under load
AU - Andreasson, Johan O.L.
AU - Shastry, Shankar
AU - Hancock, William O.
AU - Block, Steven M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Dr. Megan T. Valentine for initiating the study, Dr. Bason E. Clancy for valuable suggestions and help during the initial stages, Alice Shen and Thaddeus Jordan for help with data collection, and Bojan Milic for helpful comments. This work was supported by grants to S.M.B. (5R37GM051453) and W.O.H. (5R01GM076476) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the NIH.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/5/4
Y1 - 2015/5/4
N2 - The response of motor proteins to external loads underlies their ability to work in teams and determines the net speed and directionality of cargo transport. The mammalian kinesin-2, KIF3A/B, is a heterotrimeric motor involved in intraflagellar transport and vesicle motility in neurons. Bidirectional cargo transport is known to result from the opposing activities of KIF3A/B and dynein bound to the same cargo, but the load-dependent properties of kinesin-2 are poorly understood. We used a feedback-controlled optical trap to probe the velocity, run length, and unbinding kinetics of mouse KIF3A/B under various loads and nucleotide conditions. The kinesin-2 motor velocity is less sensitive than kinesin-1 to external forces, but its processivity diminishes steeply with load, and the motor was observed occasionally to slip and reattach. Each motor domain was characterized by studying homodimeric constructs, and a global fit to the data resulted in a comprehensive pathway that quantifies the principal force-dependent kinetic transitions. The properties of the KIF3A/B heterodimer are intermediate between the two homodimers, and the distinct load-dependent behavior is attributable to the properties of the motor domains and not to the neck linkers or the coiled-coil stalk. We conclude that the force-dependent movement of KIF3A/B differs significantly from conventional kinesin-1. Against opposing dynein forces, KIF3A/B motors are predicted to rapidly unbind and rebind, resulting in qualitatively different transport behavior from kinesin-1.
AB - The response of motor proteins to external loads underlies their ability to work in teams and determines the net speed and directionality of cargo transport. The mammalian kinesin-2, KIF3A/B, is a heterotrimeric motor involved in intraflagellar transport and vesicle motility in neurons. Bidirectional cargo transport is known to result from the opposing activities of KIF3A/B and dynein bound to the same cargo, but the load-dependent properties of kinesin-2 are poorly understood. We used a feedback-controlled optical trap to probe the velocity, run length, and unbinding kinetics of mouse KIF3A/B under various loads and nucleotide conditions. The kinesin-2 motor velocity is less sensitive than kinesin-1 to external forces, but its processivity diminishes steeply with load, and the motor was observed occasionally to slip and reattach. Each motor domain was characterized by studying homodimeric constructs, and a global fit to the data resulted in a comprehensive pathway that quantifies the principal force-dependent kinetic transitions. The properties of the KIF3A/B heterodimer are intermediate between the two homodimers, and the distinct load-dependent behavior is attributable to the properties of the motor domains and not to the neck linkers or the coiled-coil stalk. We conclude that the force-dependent movement of KIF3A/B differs significantly from conventional kinesin-1. Against opposing dynein forces, KIF3A/B motors are predicted to rapidly unbind and rebind, resulting in qualitatively different transport behavior from kinesin-1.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.cub.2015.03.013
DO - 10.1016/j.cub.2015.03.013
M3 - Article
C2 - 25866395
AN - SCOPUS:84927741846
SN - 0960-9822
VL - 25
SP - 1166
EP - 1175
JO - Current Biology
JF - Current Biology
IS - 9
ER -