Load-dependent kinetics of myosin-V can explain its high processivity
- 14 August 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Cell Biology
- Vol. 7 (9) , 861-869
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ncb1287
Abstract
Recent studies provide strong evidence that single myosin class V molecules transport vesicles and organelles processively along F-actin, taking several 36-nm steps, 'hand over hand', for each diffusional encounter. The mechanisms regulating myosin-V's processivity remain unknown. Here, we have used an optical-tweezers-based transducer to measure the effect of load on the mechanical interactions between rabbit skeletal F-actin and a single head of mouse brain myosin-V, which produces its working stroke in two phases. We found that the lifetimes of the first phase of the working stroke changed exponentially and about 10-fold over a range of pushing and pulling forces of ± 1.5 pN. Stiffness measurements suggest that intramolecular forces could approach 3.6 pN when both heads are bound to F-actin, in which case extrapolation would predict the detachment kinetics of the front head to slow down 50-fold and the kinetics of the rear head to accelerate respectively. This synchronizing effect on the chemo-mechanical cycles of the heads increases the probability of the trail head detaching first and causes a strong increase in the number of forward steps per diffusional encounter over a system with no strain dependence.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Model of Myosin V ProcessivityPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Myosin V motor proteinsThe Journal of cell biology, 2003
- Load-dependent kinetics of force production by smooth muscle myosin measured with optical tweezersNature Cell Biology, 2003
- Myosin V Walks Hand-Over-Hand: Single Fluorophore Imaging with 1.5-nm LocalizationScience, 2003
- Three-dimensional structural dynamics of myosin V by single-molecule fluorescence polarizationNature, 2003
- The motor domain determines the large step of myosin-VNature, 2002
- ADP Binding Induces an Asymmetry between the Heads of Unphosphorylated MyosinPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- A 35-Å movement of smooth muscle myosin on ADP releaseNature, 1995
- Elastic distortion of myosin heads and repriming of the working stroke in muscleNature, 1995