Motor domains of kinesin and ncd interac ... with the same binding geometry
Motor domains of kinesin and ncd interact with microtubule protofilaments with the same binding geometry.
18
Kinesin and ncd (non-claret disjunctional) are microtubule associated motor proteins which share several structural features: both motors are dimers; each monomer is composed of a stalk region, a cargo binding domain and a motor domain; the motor domains have approximately 41% sequence identity. Despite these similarities the two motors have strikingly different movement properties: kinesin is a plus-end directed molecular motor, while ncd is minus-end directed. Here we compare the structure and the microtubule-binding properties of these oppositely directed molecular motors. We determined the three-dimensional structure of tubulin sheets decorated with the motor domains of either kinesin or ncd to a resolution of < 20 A by negative stain electron microscopy and tilt series reconstruction. Comparisons with a control structure of tubulin alone revealed that in both cases the motor domain binds to the outer crest of a single protofilament making contacts with both alpha and beta tubulin. Despite their opposite directionality, the geometry of attachment of the motor domain to the protofilament in the presence of AMP-PNP is very similar for both motors. These data rule out models for directionality which have the motors binding in an opposite orientation to the microtubules. Binding of the ncd as well as the kinesin motor domain appears to induce conformational changes in tubulin. This observation suggests an active role of tubulin in motor movement and/or in the determination of directionality.
Hoenger A, Milligan RA
Journal of molecular biology
1997-02-07 00:00
265
5
553-64
Animals,Binding Sites,Cattle,Drosophila Proteins,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted,Kinesin,Microscopy, Electron,Microtubule Proteins,Microtubules,Models, Molecular,Molecular Structure,Protein Binding,Protein Conformation,Tubulin,Drosophila Proteins,Microtubule Proteins,Tubulin,ncd protein, Drosophila,Kinesin
Department of Cell Biology, Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA
J. Mol. Biol.
NIGMS GM44932, NIGMS GM52468
0022-2836
10.1006/jmbi.1996.0757
S0022-2836(96)90757-3
565
True
9048948