Abstract

Kinesin motors play central roles in establishing and maintaining the mitotic spindle during cell division. Unlike most other kinesins, Cin8, a kinesin-5 motor in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, can move bidirectionally along microtubules, switching directionality according to biochemical conditions, a behavior that remains largely unexplained. To this end, we used biochemical rate and equilibrium constant measurements as well as cryo-electron microscopy methodologies to investigate the microtubule interactions of the Cin8 motor domain. These experiments unexpectedly revealed that, whereas Cin8 ATPase kinetics fell within measured ranges for kinesins (especially kinesin-5 proteins), approximately four motors can bind each αβ-tubulin dimer within the microtubule lattice. This result contrasted with those observations on other known kinesins, which can bind only a single “canonical” site per tubulin dimer. Competition assays with human kinesin-5 (Eg5) only partially abrogated this behavior, indicating that Cin8 binds microtubules not only at the canonical site, but also one or more separate (“noncanonical”) sites. Moreover, we found that deleting the large, class-specific insert in the microtubule-binding loop 8 reverts Cin8 to one motor per αβ-tubulin in the microtubule. The novel microtubule-binding mode of Cin8 identified here provides a potential explanation for Cin8 clustering along microtubules and potentially may contribute to the mechanism for direction reversal.

Highlights

  • Kinesin motors play central roles in establishing and maintaining the mitotic spindle during cell division

  • All Cin8 motor domain constructs were 90 –95% pure based on densitometry and demonstrated very slow basal activity with ϳ20-fold enhancement of microtubulestimulated ATPase activity at low ionic strength

  • These Cin8 constructs provided advantages and disadvantages for various methodologies employed in this study, and through various biochemical experiments, they have given the general behavior of the Cin8 motor domain

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Summary

Introduction

Kinesin motors play central roles in establishing and maintaining the mitotic spindle during cell division. Cin, a kinesin-5 motor in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, can move bidirectionally along microtubules, switching directionality according to biochemical conditions, a behavior that remains largely unexplained To this end, we used biochemical rate and equilibrium constant measurements as well as cryo-electron microscopy methodologies to investigate the microtubule interactions of the Cin motor domain. We used biochemical rate and equilibrium constant measurements as well as cryo-electron microscopy methodologies to investigate the microtubule interactions of the Cin motor domain These experiments unexpectedly revealed that, whereas Cin ATPase kinetics fell within measured ranges for kinesins (especially kinesin-5 proteins), approximately four motors can bind each ␣␤-tubulin dimer within the microtubule lattice. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. It is not well understood how kinesin motors maintain this directional bias while stepping

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