Abstract

Construction and function of virtually all cilia require the universally conserved process of intraflagellar transport (IFT) [1, 2]. During the atypically fast IFT in the green alga C.reinhardtii, on average, 10 kinesin-2 motors "line up" in a tight assembly on the trains [3], provoking the question of how these motors coordinate their action to ensure smooth and fast transport along the flagellum without standing in each other's way. Here, we show that the heterodimeric FLA8/10 kinesin-2 alone is responsible for the atypically fast IFT in C.reinhardtii. Notably, in single-molecule studies, FLA8/10 moved at speeds matching those of invivo IFT [4] but additionally displayed a slow velocity distribution, indicative of auto-inhibition. Addition of the KAP subunit to generate the heterotrimeric FLA8/10/KAP relieved this inhibition, thus providing a mechanistic rationale for heterotrimerization with the KAP subunit fully activating FLA8/10 for IFT invivo. Finally, we linked fast FLA8/10 and slow KLP11/20 kinesin-2 from C.reinhardtii and C.elegans through a DNA tether to understand the molecular underpinnings of motor coordination during IFT invivo. For motor pairs from both species, the co-transport velocities very nearly matched the single-molecule velocities, and both complexes spent roughly 80% of the time with only one of the two motors attached to the microtubule. Thus, irrespective of phylogeny and kinetic properties, kinesin-2 motors work mostly alone without sacrificing efficiency. Our findings thus offer a simple mechanism for how efficient IFT is achieved across diverse organisms despitebeing carried out by motors with different properties.

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