Hua W, Young E C, Fleming M L, Gelles J
Biophysics and Structural Biology Graduate Program, Department of Biochemistry, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts 02254, USA.
Nature. 1997 Jul 24;388(6640):390-3. doi: 10.1038/41118.
A key goal in the study of the function of ATP-driven motor enzymes is to quantify the movement produced from consumption of one ATP molecule. Discrete displacements of the processive motor kinesin along a microtubule have been reported as 5 and/or 8 nm. However, analysis of nanometre-scale movements is hindered by superimposed brownian motion. Moreover, because kinesin is processive and turns over stochastically, some observed displacements must arise from summation of smaller movements that are too closely spaced in time to be resolved. To address both of these problems, we used light microscopy instrumentation with low positional drift (< 39 pms[-1]) to observe single molecules of a kinesin derivative moving slowly (approximately 2.5nm s[-1]) at very low (150nM) ATP concentration, so that ATP-induced displacements were widely spaced in time. This allowed increased time-averaging to suppress brownian noise (without application of external force), permitting objective measurement of the distribution of all observed displacement sizes. The distribution was analysed with a statistics-based method which explicitly takes into account the occurrence of unresolved movements, and determines both the underlying step size and the coupling of steps to ATP hydrolytic events. Our data support a fundamental enzymatic cycle for kinesin in which hydrolysis of a single ATP molecule is coupled to a step distance of the microtubule protofilament lattice spacing of 8.12 nm. Step distances other than 8nm are excluded, as is the coupling of each step to two or more consecutive ATP hydrolysis reactions with similar rates, or the coupling of two 8-nm steps to a single hydrolysis. The measured ratio of ATP consumption rate to stepping rate is invariant over a wide range of ATP concentration, suggesting that the 1 ATP to 8nm coupling inferred from behaviour at low ATP can be generalized to high ATP.
研究ATP驱动的运动酶功能的一个关键目标是量化消耗一个ATP分子所产生的运动。据报道,进行性运动蛋白驱动蛋白沿微管的离散位移为5纳米和/或8纳米。然而,纳米级运动的分析受到叠加的布朗运动的阻碍。此外,由于驱动蛋白具有连续性且随机周转,一些观察到的位移必定源于时间上间隔过近而无法分辨的较小运动的总和。为了解决这两个问题,我们使用了位置漂移低(<39皮米每秒[-1])的光学显微镜仪器,在非常低的ATP浓度(150纳摩尔)下观察一种驱动蛋白衍生物的单个分子缓慢移动(约2.5纳米每秒[-1]),这样ATP诱导的位移在时间上间隔很宽。这使得增加时间平均以抑制布朗噪声(无需施加外力)成为可能,从而能够客观测量所有观察到的位移大小的分布。我们用一种基于统计的方法分析了该分布,该方法明确考虑了未分辨运动的发生情况,并确定了潜在的步长以及步长与ATP水解事件的耦合关系。我们的数据支持驱动蛋白的一个基本酶促循环,即单个ATP分子的水解与微管原纤维晶格间距8.12纳米的步长距离相耦合。排除了8纳米以外的步长距离,以及每个步长与两个或更多具有相似速率的连续ATP水解反应的耦合,或者两个8纳米步长与单个水解的耦合。在很宽的ATP浓度范围内,测得的ATP消耗速率与步速之比是不变的,这表明从低ATP浓度下的行为推断出的1个ATP与8纳米的耦合关系可以推广到高ATP浓度情况。