Abstract

Microtubule-based molecular motors mediate transport of intracellular cargo to subdomains in neurons. Previous evidence has suggested that the anesthetic propofol decreases the average run-length potential of the major anterograde transporters kinesin-1 and kinesin-2 without altering their velocity. This effect on kinesin has not been observed with other inhibitors, stimulating considerable interest in the underlying mechanism. Here, we used a photoactive derivative of propofol, meta-azipropofol (AziPm), to search for potential propofol-binding sites in kinesin. Single-molecule motility assays confirmed that AziPm and propofol similarly inhibit kinesin-1 and kinesin-2. We then applied AziPm in semiquantitative radiolabeling and MS microsequencing assays to identify propofol-binding sites within microtubule–kinesin complexes. The radiolabeling experiments suggested preferential AziPm binding to the ATP-bound microtubule–kinesin complex. The photolabeled residues were contained within the kinesin motor domain rather than at the motor domain–β-tubulin interface. No residues within the P-loop of kinesin were photolabeled, indicating an inhibitory mechanism that does not directly affect ATPase activity and has an effect on run length without changing velocity. Our results also indicated that when the kinesin motor interacts with the microtubule during its processive run, a site forms in kinesin to which propofol can then bind and allosterically disrupt the kinesin–microtubule interaction, resulting in kinesin detachment and run termination. The discovery of the propofol-binding allosteric site in kinesin may improve our understanding of the strict coordination of the motor heads during the processive run. We hypothesize that propofol's potent effect on intracellular transport contributes to various components of its anesthetic action.

Highlights

  • Microtubule-based molecular motors mediate transport of intracellular cargo to subdomains in neurons

  • This study indicates that propofol binds at a site allosteric to the catalytic site within the kinesin motor head, which forms in the ATP-bound state, leading to premature detachment of anterograde processive kinesins and their cargos from the microtubule (Fig. 1)

  • This common site identified in K439, KIF3B, and KIF3C is the first evidence of a druggable inhibitory site within the interface of the Switch I/II subdomain and the microtubule– kinesin interface

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

AziPm, meta-azipropofol; ACN, acetonitrile; AMPPNP, adenosine 5Ј-(␤,␥-imino)-triphosphate; ADP-AlF4Ϫ, adenosine diphosphate-aluminum fluoride; CASTp, Computed Atlas of Surface Topography of proteins; GABAA, ␥-aminobutyric acid type A; IPTG, isopropyl ␤-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside; LB, lysogeny broth; Qdot, quantum-dot; SHD, synthetic heterodimerization helix; TIVA, total intravenous administration; TIRF, total internal reflection fluorescence; TEV, tobacco etch virus. The residues photolabeled by AziPm were located in the motor domains of kinesin-1 and kinesin-2 KIF3B and KIF3C. No residues were photolabeled in the KIF3A polypeptide of heterodimeric KIF3AB or KIF3AC. The shared allosteric site identified in each was distinct from the ATP-binding site at the conserved Switch I/II subdomain that is highly dynamic over the course of the kinesin stepping cycle (14, 29 –33). These results identify a new druggable site in the kinesin family and provide insight into the potential effects of anesthetics on intracellular transport

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