Abstract

Molecular motors of the myosin superfamily share a generic motor domain region. They commonly bind actin in an ATP-sensitive manner, exhibit actin-activated ATPase activity, and generate force and movement in this interaction. Class-18 myosins form heavy chain dimers and contain protein interaction domains located at their unique N-terminal extension. Here, we characterized human myosin-18A molecular function in the interaction with nucleotides, F-actin, and its putative binding partner, the Golgi-associated phosphoprotein GOLPH3. We show that myosin-18A comprises two actin binding sites. One is located in the KE-rich region at the start of the N-terminal extension and appears to mediate ATP-independent binding to F-actin. The second actin-binding site resides in the generic motor domain and is regulated by nucleotide binding in the absence of intrinsic ATP hydrolysis competence. This core motor domain displays its highest actin affinity in the ADP state. Electron micrographs of myosin-18A motor domain-decorated F-actin filaments show a periodic binding pattern independent of the nucleotide state. We show that the PDZ module mediates direct binding of myosin-18A to GOLPH3, and this interaction in turn modulates the actin binding properties of the N-terminal extension. Thus, myosin-18A can act as an actin cross-linker with multiple regulatory modulators that targets interacting proteins or complexes to the actin-based cytoskeleton.

Highlights

  • Class-18A myosins share a unique N-terminal extension comprising a PDZ module and a KE-rich region

  • We aimed to elucidate the molecular properties of three fundamental human myosin-18A functional domains: the KE-rich region and the PDZ module, which together constitute the N-terminal extension, as well as the generic myosin motor domain

  • We show that the core myosin-18A motor domain binds mant-labeled ATP and ADP nucleotides but does not exhibit intrinsic basal or actin-activated ATPase activity

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Summary

Introduction

Class-18A myosins share a unique N-terminal extension comprising a PDZ module and a KE-rich region. Results: Human myosin-18A binds F-actin via its motor domain in a nucleotide-dependent manner and via the KE-rich region, modulated by direct interaction between the PDZ module and GOLPH3. The second actin-binding site resides in the generic motor domain and is regulated by nucleotide binding in the absence of intrinsic ATP hydrolysis competence. This core motor domain displays its highest actin affinity in the ADP state. We show that the PDZ module mediates direct binding of myosin-18A to GOLPH3, and this interaction in turn modulates the actin binding properties of the N-terminal extension. Myosin-18A can act as an actin cross-linker with multiple regulatory modulators that targets interacting proteins or complexes to the actin-based cytoskeleton

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