Investigation of the role of microtubule on the activity of the mitotic kinesin EG5 using multiscale modelling: unravelling molecular mechanisms.
Microtubules are crucial components of the mitotic spindle, essential in chromosome segregation during cell division. EG5, a kinesin motor protein, has emerged as a critical player in this process by promoting the separation of sister chromatids. Dysregulation of EG5 function is associated with tumorigenesis, making it a promising target for cancer therapeutics. Hence, understanding EG5's molecular mechanisms is a key to developing better therapies with fewer side effects. Here, we investigate the mechanisms by which EG5 interacts with microtubules and how this interaction enhances its motor activity. Utilizing computational methods, we probe the role of microtubule binding in the allosteric regulation of EG5 dynamics. Our results demonstrate that microtubule binding significantly enhances EG5's dynamic flexibility and motor activity, while inhibitors targeting distinct allosteric sites disrupt this interaction. These insights provide a molecular framework for the rational design of EG5-targeted inhibitors, with potential implications for anticancer drug development.
- Research Article
58
- 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110900
- May 1, 2022
- Cell Reports
SUMMARYKinesin-1 activity is regulated by autoinhibition. Intramolecular interactions within the kinesin heavy chain (KHC) are proposed to be one facet of motor regulation. The KHC also binds to the kinesin light chain (KLC), which has been implicated in both autoinhibition and activation of the motor. We show that the KLC inhibits the kinesin-microtubule interaction independently from the proposed intramolecular interaction within KHC. Cargo-adaptor proteins that bind the KLC stimulated processive movement, but the landing rate of activated kinesin complexes remained low. Microtubule-associated protein 7 (MAP7) enhanced motility by increasing the landing rate and run length of the activated kinesin motors. Our results support a model whereby the motor activity of the kinesin is regulated by synergistic inhibition mechanisms and that cargo-adaptor binding to the KLC releases both mechanisms. However, a non-motor MAP is required for robust microtubule association of the activated motor. Thus, human kinesin is regulated by synergistic autoinhibition and activation mechanisms.
- Research Article
119
- 10.1016/s0092-8674(00)81686-4
- Jan 1, 2000
- Cell
Dynamic Spatial Regulation in the Bacterial Cell
- Research Article
40
- 10.1016/j.cub.2019.12.056
- Feb 20, 2020
- Current Biology
SummaryNeuronal dendrites are characterized by an anti-parallel microtubule organization. The mixed oriented microtubules promote dendrite development and facilitate polarized cargo trafficking; however, the mechanism that regulates dendritic microtubule organization is still unclear. Here, we found that the kinesin-14 motor KIFC3 is important for organizing dendritic microtubules and to control dendrite development. The kinesin-14 motor proteins (Drosophila melanogaster Ncd, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Kar3, Saccharomyces pombe Pkl1, and Xenopus laevis XCTK2) are characterized by a C-terminal motor domain and are well described to organize the spindle microtubule during mitosis using an additional microtubule binding site in the N terminus [1, 2, 3, 4]. In mammals, there are three kinesin-14 members, KIFC1, KIFC2, and KIFC3. It was recently shown that KIFC1 is important for organizing axonal microtubules in neurons, a process that depends on the two microtubule-interacting domains [5]. Unlike KIFC1, KIFC2 and KIFC3 lack the N-terminal microtubule binding domain and only have one microtubule-interacting domain, the motor domain [6, 7]. Thus, in order to regulate microtubule-microtubule crosslinking or sliding, KIFC2 and KIFC3 need to interact with additional microtubule binding proteins to connect two microtubules. We found that KIFC3 has a dendrite-specific distribution and interacts with microtubule minus-end binding protein CAMSAP2. Depletion of KIFC3 or CAMSAP2 results in increased microtubule dynamics during dendritic development. We propose a model in which CAMSAP2 anchors KIFC3 at microtubule minus ends and immobilizes microtubule arrays in dendrites.
- Research Article
250
- 10.1074/mcp.m400158-mcp200
- Nov 23, 2004
- Molecular & Cellular Proteomics
The accurate distribution of sister chromatids during cell division is crucial for the generation of two cells with the same complement of genetic information. A highly dynamic microtubule-based structure, the mitotic spindle, carries out the physical separation of the chromosomes to opposite poles of the cells and, moreover, determines the cell division cleavage plane. In animal cells, the spindle comprises microtubules that radiate from the microtubule organizing centers, the centrosomes, and interact with kinetochores on the chromosomes. Malfunctioning of the spindle can lead to chromosome missegregation and hence result in aneuploidy, a hallmark of most human cancers. Despite major progress in deciphering the temporal and spatial regulation of the mitotic spindle, its composition and function are not fully understood. A more complete inventory of spindle components would therefore constitute an important advance. Here we describe the purification of human mitotic spindles and their analysis by MS/MS. We identified 151 proteins previously known to associate with the spindle apparatus, centrosomes, and/or kinetochores and 644 other proteins, including 154 uncharacterized components that did not show obvious homologies to known proteins and did not contain motifs indicative of a particular localization. Of these uncharacterized proteins, 17 were tagged and localized in transfected mitotic cells, resulting in the identification of six genuine spindle components (KIAA0008, CdcA8, KIAA1187, FLJ12649, FLJ90806, and C20Orf129). This study illustrates the strength of a proteomic approach for the analysis of isolated human spindles and identifies several novel spindle components for future functional studies.
- Research Article
452
- 10.1016/j.cell.2007.11.011
- Nov 1, 2007
- Cell
Cytokinesis: Placing and Making the Final Cut
- Research Article
95
- 10.1074/jbc.m507028200
- Feb 1, 2006
- Journal of Biological Chemistry
During mitosis, kinesin and dynein motor proteins play critical roles in the equal segregation of chromosomes between two daughter cells. Kinesin-2 is composed of two microtubule-based motor subunits, KIF3A/3B, and a kinesin-associated protein known as KAP3, which links KIF3A/3B to cargo that is carried to cellular organelles along microtubules in interphase cells. We have shown here that the kinesin-2 complex is localized with components of the mitotic apparatus such as spindle microtubules and centrosomes. Furthermore, we found that expression of a mutant KIF3B, which is able to associate with KIF3A but not KAP3 in NIH3T3 cells, caused chromosomal aneuploidy and abnormal spindle formation. Our data suggested that the kinesin-2 complex plays an important role not only in interphase but also in mitosis.
- Research Article
154
- 10.1093/emboj/cdf314
- Jun 17, 2002
- The EMBO Journal
Disruption of ypuG and ypuH open reading frames in Bacillus subtilis leads to temperature-sensitive slow growth, a defect in chromosome structure and formation of anucleate cells. The genes, which were named scpA and scpB, were found to be epistatic to the smc gene. Fusions of ScpA and ScpB to the fluorescent proteins YFP or CFP showed that both proteins co-localize to two or four discrete foci that were present at mid-cell in young cells, and within both cell halves, generally adjacent to chromosomal origin regions, in older cells. ScpA and ScpB foci are associated with DNA and depend on the presence of SMC and both Scps. ScpA and ScpB are associated with each other and with SMC in vivo, as determined using the FRET technique and immunoprecipitation assays. Genes similar to scpA and scpB are present in many bacteria and archaea, which suggests that their gene products form a condensation complex with SMC in most prokaryotes. The observed foci could constitute condensation factories that pull DNA away from mid-cell into both cell halves.
- Research Article
12
- 10.1016/j.cub.2007.03.013
- Apr 30, 2007
- Current biology : CB
Chromosome Congression: The Kinesin-8-Step Path to Alignment
- Research Article
58
- 10.1016/j.cub.2010.02.067
- Apr 1, 2010
- Current Biology
Microtubule Motility on Reconstituted Meiotic Chromatin
- Research Article
6
- 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2011.04030.x
- Jan 11, 2012
- New Phytologist
Putting a bifunctional motor to work: insights into the role of plant KCH kinesins
- Research Article
168
- 10.1016/s0960-9822(00)00316-x
- Feb 1, 2000
- Current Biology
Role of the kinesin neck linker and catalytic core in microtubule-based motility.
- Research Article
87
- 10.1016/j.molcel.2006.07.020
- Sep 1, 2006
- Molecular cell
Large Conformational Changes in a Kinesin Motor Catalyzed by Interaction with Microtubules
- Research Article
405
- 10.1016/j.cub.2010.02.058
- Apr 1, 2010
- Current Biology
Motor Coordination via a Tug-of-War Mechanism Drives Bidirectional Vesicle Transport
- Research Article
14
- 10.1016/j.cub.2006.09.025
- Oct 1, 2006
- Current Biology
Bacterial Division: Another Way to Box in the Ring
- Research Article
17
- 10.1016/j.cub.2005.03.026
- Apr 1, 2005
- Current Biology
Bacterial Mitosis: Actin in a New Role at the Origin
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