Motor domain phosphorylation increases nucleotide exchange and turns MYO6 into a faster and stronger motor

Myosin motors perform many fundamental functions in eukaryotic cells by providing force generation, transport or tethering capacity. Motor activity control within the cell involves on/off switches, however, few examples are known of how myosins regulate speed or processivity and fine-tune their acti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-08, Vol.15 (1), p.6716-18, Article 6716
Hauptverfasser: de Jonge, Janeska J., Graw, Andreas, Kargas, Vasileios, Batters, Christopher, Montanarella, Antonino F., O’Loughlin, Tom, Johnson, Chloe, Arden, Susan D., Warren, Alan J., Geeves, Michael A., Kendrick-Jones, John, Zaccai, Nathan R., Kröss, Markus, Veigel, Claudia, Buss, Folma
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Myosin motors perform many fundamental functions in eukaryotic cells by providing force generation, transport or tethering capacity. Motor activity control within the cell involves on/off switches, however, few examples are known of how myosins regulate speed or processivity and fine-tune their activity to a specific cellular task. Here, we describe a phosphorylation event for myosins of class VI (MYO6) in the motor domain, which accelerates its ATPase activity leading to a 4-fold increase in motor speed determined by actin-gliding assays, single molecule mechanics and stopped flow kinetics. We demonstrate that the serine/threonine kinase DYRK2 phosphorylates MYO6 at S267 in vitro. Single-molecule optical-tweezers studies at low load reveal that S267-phosphorylation results in faster nucleotide-exchange kinetics without change in the working stroke of the motor. The selective increase in stiffness of the acto-MYO6 complex when proceeding load-dependently into the nucleotide-free rigor state demonstrates that S267-phosphorylation turns MYO6 into a stronger motor. Finally, molecular dynamic simulations of the nucleotide-free motor reveal an alternative interaction network within insert-1 upon phosphorylation, suggesting a molecular mechanism, which regulates insert-1 positioning, turning the S267-phosphorylated MYO6 into a faster motor. Myosin motors perform many fundamental functions in eukaryotic cells by providing force generation, transport or tethering capacity. Here, the authors show that a single phosphorylation event can modulate actin-activated ATPase activity and change the mechanical properties of myosin-VI.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-49898-3