Point mutation of adenosine triphosphate-binding motif generated rigor kinesin that selectively blocks anterograde lysosome membrane transport.
Open Access
- 15 November 1995
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 131 (4) , 1039-1053
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.131.4.1039
Abstract
In the study of motor proteins, the molecular mechanism of mechanochemical coupling, as well as the cellular role of these proteins, is an important issue. To assess these questions we introduced cDNA of wild-type and site-directed mutant kinesin heavy chains into fibroblasts, and analyzed the behavior of the recombinant proteins and the mechanisms involved in organelle transports. Overexpression of wild-type kinesin significantly promoted elongation of cellular processes. Wild-type kinesin accumulated at the tips of the long processes, whereas the kinesin mutants, which contained either a T93N- or T93I mutation in the ATP-binding motif, tightly bound to microtubules in the center of the cells. These mutant kinesins could bind to microtubules in vitro, but could not dissociate from them even in the presence of ATP, and did not support microtubule motility in vitro, thereby indicating rigor-type mutations. Retrograde transport from the Golgi apparatus to the endoplasmic reticulum, as well as lysosome dispersion, was shown to be a microtubule-dependent, plus-end-directed movement. The latter was selectively blocked in the rigor-mutant cells, although the microtubule minus-end-directed motion of lysosomes was not affected. We found the point mutations that make kinesin motor in strong binding state with microtubules in vitro and showed that this mutant causes a dominant effect that selectively blocks anterograde lysosome membrane transports in vivo.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Kinesin is the motor for microtubule-mediated Golgi-to-ER membrane traffic [published errata appear in J Cell Biol 1995 Mar;128(5):following 988 and 1995 May;129(3):893]The Journal of cell biology, 1995
- KIF1B, a novel microtubule plus end-directed monomeric motor protein for transport of mitochondriaCell, 1994
- Characterization of the KLP68D kinesin-like protein in Drosophila: possible roles in axonal transport.The Journal of cell biology, 1994
- Cloning and localization of a conventional kinesin motor expressed exclusively in neuronsNeuron, 1994
- Axonal transport and the cytoskeletonCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 1993
- Suppression of kinesin expression in cultured hippocampal neurons using antisense oligonucleotides.The Journal of cell biology, 1992
- The kinesin superfamily: tails of functional redundancyTrends in Cell Biology, 1991
- Dihydrotetramethylrosamine: A long wavelength, fluorogenic peroxidase substrate evaluated in vitro and in a model phagocyteBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- Identification of two lysosomal membrane glycoproteins.The Journal of cell biology, 1985
- Lectin labeling of sprouting neurons. II. Relative movement and appearance of glycoconjugates during plasmalemmal expansion.The Journal of cell biology, 1981