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Tropomyosin is essential for processive movement of a class v Myosin from budding yeast

ISSN:0960-9822
2012年第22卷第15期
Hodges AR,Krementsova EB,Bookwalter CS,Fagnant PM,Sladewski TE,Trybus KM Alex R. Hodges1, Elena B. Krementsova1, Carol S. Bookwalter1, Patricia M. Fagnant1, Thomas E. Sladewski1, Kathleen M. Trybus1

Myosin V is an actin-based motor protein involved in intracellular cargo transport [1]. Given this physiological role, it was widely assumed that all class V myosins are processive, able to take multiple steps along actin filaments without dissociating. This notion was challenged when several class?V myosins were characterized as nonprocessive in?vitro, including Myo2p, the essential class V myosin from S.?cerevisiae [2-6]. Myo2p moves cargo including secretory vesicles and other organelles for several microns along actin cables in?vivo. This demonstrated cargo transporter must therefore either operate in small ensembles or?behave processively in the cellular context. Here we show?that Myo2p moves processively in?vitro as a single motor when it walks on an actin track that more closely resembles the actin cables found in?vivo. The key to processivity is tropomyosin: Myo2p is not processive on bare actin?but highly processive on actin-tropomyosin. The major yeast tropomyosin isoform, Tpm1p, supports the most robust processivity. Tropomyosin slows the rate of MgADP release, thus increasing the time the motor spends strongly attached to actin. This is the first example of tropomyosin switching a motor from nonprocessive to processive motion on actin.

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ISSN:0960-9822
2012年第22卷第15期

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