Monomeric myosin V uses two binding regions for the assembly of stable translocation complexes

Myosin-motors are conserved from yeast to human and transport a great variety of cargoes. Most plus-end directed myosins, which constitute the vast majority of all myosin motors, form stable dimers and interact constitutively with their cargo complexes. To date, little is known about regulatory mech...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2007-12, Vol.104 (50), p.19778-19783
Hauptverfasser: Heuck, Alexander, Du, Tung-Gia, Jellbauer, Stephan, Richter, Klaus, Kruse, Claudia, Jaklin, Sigrun, Müller, Marisa, Buchner, Johannes, Jansen, Ralf-Peter, Niessing, Dierk
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Myosin-motors are conserved from yeast to human and transport a great variety of cargoes. Most plus-end directed myosins, which constitute the vast majority of all myosin motors, form stable dimers and interact constitutively with their cargo complexes. To date, little is known about regulatory mechanisms for cargo-complex assembly. In this study, we show that the type V myosin Myo4p binds to its cargo via two distinct binding regions, the C-terminal tail and a coiled-coil domain-containing fragment. Furthermore, we find that Myo4p is strictly monomeric at physiologic concentrations. Because type V myosins are thought to require dimerization for processive movement, a mechanism must be in place to ensure that oligomeric Myo4p is incorporated into cargo-translocation complexes. Indeed, we find that artificial dimerization of the Myo4p C-terminal tail promotes stabilization of myosin-cargo complexes, suggesting that full-length Myo4p dimerizes in the cocomplex as well. We also combined the Myo4p C-terminal tail with the coiled-coil region, lever arm, and motor domain from a different myosin to form constitutively dimeric motor proteins. This heterologous motor successfully translocates its cargo in vivo, suggesting that wild-type Myo4p may also function as a dimer during cargo-complex transport.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0706780104