CU Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
MCDB Home > faculty > FacultyPublications > StowellMHPublications > GTPase activity of dynamin and resulting ... e are essential for endocytosis
Document Actions

GTPase activity of dynamin and resulting ... e are essential for endocytosis


GTPase activity of dynamin and resulting conformation change are essential for endocytosis.

40

Dynamin is a large GTPase with a relative molecular mass of 96,000 (Mr 96K) that is involved in clathrin-mediated endocytosis and other vesicular trafficking processes. Although its function is apparently essential for scission of newly formed vesicles from the plasma membrane, the nature of dynamin's role in the scission process is still unclear. It has been proposed that dynamin is a regulator (similar to classical G proteins) of downstream effectors. Here we report the analysis of several point mutants of dynamin's GTPase effector (GED) and GTPase domains. We show that oligomerization and GTP binding alone, by dynamin, are not sufficient for endocytosis in vivo. Rather, efficient GTP hydrolysis and an associated conformational change are also required. These data argue that dynamin has a mechanochemical function in vesicle scission.


Marks B, Stowell MH, Vallis Y, Mills IG, Gibson A, Hopkins CR, McMahon HT

Nature

2001-03-08 00:00

410

6825

231-5

Amino Acid Sequence,Animals,COS Cells,Cattle,Drosophila,Dynamins,Endocytosis,GTP Phosphohydrolases,Guanosine Triphosphate,Humans,Hydrolysis,Molecular Sequence Data,Point Mutation,Protein Conformation,Protein Structure, Tertiary,Recombinant Fusion Proteins,Transferrin,Recombinant Fusion Proteins,Transferrin,Guanosine Triphosphate,GTP Phosphohydrolases,Dynamins

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 2QH, UK

Nature


0028-0836

10.1038/35065645

35065645

http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/35065645

1104

True

11242086

Michael Stowell
University of Colorado Contact Us  |   Legal & Trademarks  |  Privacy