Abstract

Conventional kinesin is a motor protein that moves stepwise along microtubules carrying membrane-bound organelles toward the periphery of cells. The steps are of amplitude 8.1 nm, the distance between adjacent tubulin binding sites, and are powered by the hydrolysis of ATP. We have asked: how many steps does kinesin take for each molecule of ATP that it hydrolyzes? To answer this question, the motility and ATP hydrolysis of recombinant, heterotetrameric and homodimeric conventional Drosophila kinesins adsorbed to 200-nm-diameter casein-coated silica beads were assayed under identical, single-molecule conditions. Division of the speed by the maximum microtubule-activated ATPase rate gave a stoichiometry of 1. 08 +/- 0.09 steps for each ATP hydrolyzed at 1 mM ATP. Therefore, under low loads in which the drag force << 1 pN, coupling between the chemical and mechanical cycles of kinesin is tight, consistent with conventional power stroke models. Our results rule out models that require two or more ATPs/step, such as some thermal ratchet models, or that propose multiple steps powered by single ATPs.

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