Here, using a quantitative in vivo assay, we map three regions in the carboxy terminus of conventional kinesin that are involved in cargo association, folding and regulation, respectively. Using C-terminal and internal deletions, point mutations, localization studies, and an engineered 'minimal' kinesin, we identify five heptads of a coiled-coil domain in the kinesin tail that are necessary and sufficient for cargo association. Mutational analysis and in vitro ATPase assays highlight a conserved motif in the globular tail that is involved in regulation of the motor domain; a region preceding this motif participates in folding. Although these sites are spatially and functionally distinct, they probably cooperate during activation of the motor for cargo transport.
. Live-cell monitoring of tyrosine phosphorylation in focal adhesions following microtubule disruption. J. Cell Sci. 116, 975-986.We apologize for omitting the reference Kaverina et al., 2000 from the reference list in both the online and print versions of this paper. The full reference details are given below.
Kinesins are microtubule motors that use the energy derived from the hydrolysis of ATP to move unidirectionally along microtubules. The founding member of this still growing superfamily is conventional kinesin, a dimeric motor that moves processively towards the plus end of microtubules. Within the family of conventional kinesins, two groups can be distinguished to date, one derived from animal species, and one originating from filamentous fungi. So far no conventional kinesin has been reported from plant cells. Fungal and animal conventional kinesins differ in several respects, both in terms of their primary sequence and their physiological properties. Thus all fungal conventional kinesins move at velocities that are 4 -5 times higher than those of animal conventional kinesins, and all of them appear to lack associated light chains. Both groups of motors are characterized by a number of group-specific sequence features which are considered here with respect to their functional importance. Animal and fungal conventional kinesins also share a number of sequence characteristics which point to common principles of motor function. The overall domain organization is remarkably similar. A C-terminal sequence motif common to all kinesins, which constitutes the only region of high homology outside the motor domain, suggests common principles of cargo association in both groups of motors. Consideration of the differences of, and similarities between, fungal and animal kinesins offers novel possibilities for experimentation (e. g., by constructing chimeras) that can be expected to contribute to our understanding of motor function.
We have developed an assay that allows the functional efficiency of mutant kinesins to be probed in vivo. We show here that the growth rate of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa can be used as a sensitive reporter for the ability of mutant kinesins to suppress the phenotype of the kinesin null mutant of Neurospora. Truncation mutants, internal deletion mutants and chimeras, in which homologous domains were exchanged between different fungal kinesins, were generated and transformed into the kinesin-deficient strain. None of the mutations affect motor velocity in vitro, but even minor alterations in the tail domain severely compromise kinesin's performance in vivo. The analysis of these mutants has identified subdomains in the stalk and tail likely to be involved in cargo binding and/or regulation of motor activity. The phenotypes of several mutants strongly suggest that kinesin requires a folded conformation to achieve full functionality in vivo. Folding critically depends on two flexible domains in the stalk that allow an interaction of the tail with the neck/hinge region near the catalytic motor domain. The assay has proven to be a valuable tool in the analysis of kinesin function in vivo and should help to characterize the sites involved in intra- and intermolecular interactions.
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