Bugiel Michael, Chugh Mayank, Jachowski Tobias Jörg, Schäffer Erik, Jannasch Anita
Cellular Nanoscience, Center for Plant Molecular Biology (ZMBP), University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Cellular Nanoscience, Center for Plant Molecular Biology (ZMBP), University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Biophys J. 2020 Apr 21;118(8):1958-1967. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2020.02.030. Epub 2020 Mar 14.
Microtubules are highly dynamic filaments with dramatic structural rearrangements and length changes during the cell cycle. An accurate control of the microtubule length is essential for many cellular processes, in particular during cell division. Motor proteins from the kinesin-8 family depolymerize microtubules by interacting with their ends in a collective and length-dependent manner. However, it is still unclear how kinesin-8 depolymerizes microtubules. Here, we tracked the microtubule end-binding activity of yeast kinesin-8, Kip3, under varying loads and nucleotide conditions using high-precision optical tweezers. We found that single Kip3 motors spent up to 200 s at the microtubule end and were not stationary there but took several 8-nm forward and backward steps that were suppressed by loads. Interestingly, increased loads, similar to increased motor concentrations, also exponentially decreased the motors' residence time at the microtubule end. On the microtubule lattice, loads also exponentially decreased the run length and time. However, for the same load, lattice run times were significantly longer compared to end residence times, suggesting the presence of a distinct force-dependent detachment mechanism at the microtubule end. The force dependence of the end residence time enabled us to estimate what force must act on a single motor to achieve the microtubule depolymerization speed of a motor ensemble. This force is higher than the stall force of a single Kip3 motor, supporting a collective force-dependent depolymerization mechanism that unifies the so-called "bump-off" and "switching" models. Understanding the mechanics of kinesin-8's microtubule end activity will provide important insights into cell division with implications for cancer research.
微管是高度动态的细丝,在细胞周期中会发生显著的结构重排和长度变化。精确控制微管长度对于许多细胞过程至关重要,尤其是在细胞分裂期间。驱动蛋白-8家族的驱动蛋白通过以集体且长度依赖的方式与微管末端相互作用来使其解聚。然而,驱动蛋白-8如何使微管解聚仍不清楚。在这里,我们使用高精度光镊在不同负载和核苷酸条件下追踪了酵母驱动蛋白-8(Kip3)的微管末端结合活性。我们发现单个Kip3驱动蛋白在微管末端停留长达200秒,并非静止不动,而是向前和向后迈出几步8纳米的步伐,这些步伐会被负载抑制。有趣的是,与增加驱动蛋白浓度类似,增加负载也会使驱动蛋白在微管末端的停留时间呈指数下降。在微管晶格上,负载也会使行程长度和时间呈指数下降。然而,对于相同的负载,晶格上的行程时间明显长于末端停留时间,这表明在微管末端存在一种独特的力依赖解离机制。末端停留时间的力依赖性使我们能够估计单个驱动蛋白必须承受多大的力才能达到驱动蛋白群体的微管解聚速度。这个力高于单个Kip3驱动蛋白的失速力,支持了一种统一所谓“撞离”和“切换”模型的集体力依赖解聚机制。了解驱动蛋白-8微管末端活性的力学原理将为细胞分裂提供重要见解,对癌症研究具有重要意义。