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First published online November 7, 2007
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.016931
Commentary |
1 MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, CB2 0QH, UK
2 Research Institute for Cell Engineering, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8562, Japan
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: laa{at}mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk)
Accepted 3 October 2007
| Summary |
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4 is a central feature. Differences due to the presence of ADP, as compared with ATP analogues, support previously determined crystal structures of kinesins alone in suggesting that
4 is part of a pathway linking the nucleotide-binding site and the neck that connects to cargo. A 3D structure of the microtubule-bound Kar3 motor domain in a nucleotide-free state has revealed dramatic changes not yet reported for any crystal structure, including melting of the switch II helix, that may be part of the mechanism by which information is transmitted. A nucleotide-dependent movement of helix
6, first seen in crystal structures of Kif1a, appears to bring it into contact with tubulin and may provide another communication link. A microtubule-induced movement of loop L7 and a related distortion of the central β-sheet, detected only in the empty state, may also send a signal to the region of the motor core that interacts with the neck. Earlier images of a kinesin-1 dimer in the empty state, showing a close interaction between the two motor heads, can now be interpreted in terms of a communication route from the active site of the directly bound head via its central β-sheet to the tethered head.
Key words: Cryo-electron microscopy, Image reconstruction, Microtubule motors
| Introduction |
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- and β-phosphates of the bound nucleotide, whereas the P-loop and switch II loop are close to the position of the
-phosphate that is lost when ATP is hydrolysed to ADP. The neck associates with another part of the surface of the motor domain, on the opposite side from the nucleotide-binding site. Plus-end-directed kinesins and minus-end-directed kinesins differ in having their neck regions connected to the C-terminal and N-terminal ends, respectively, of the motor domain. However, the necks emerge from a similar point in both cases (see Fig. 2C,F) and may be controlled in similar ways. Nevertheless, it is unclear in either case how binding to a MT stimulates the release of ADP, how ATP binding promotes neck movement or how neck movement leads to detachment of the motor domain from tubulin.
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4 and nearby helix
5 (see Fig. 2D,E). It was proposed that these latter changes are caused by ATP binding and directly promote neck-linker docking, which, in turn, provides a force to move cargo towards the MT plus end (Rice et al., 1999
Since there are no crystal structures of any kinesin family motor in the empty state, it is completely unclear how ADP is released and replaced by ATP. Nor is it known how neck movement or nucleotide hydrolysis within the motor domain control its binding to and detachment from tubulin. As yet, no crystallisation conditions have been found to induce crystals of a kinesin-tubulin complex. Electron microscopists have therefore been attempting to obtain equivalent information from high-resolution images of motor domains bound to MTs, which is possible when rapidly frozen unstained specimens are studied under cryo-EM conditions. The difficulty lies in collecting enough good images to average out the noise that masks the fine details. Recent achievements are two 10 Å maps of a monomeric motor domain (from mammalian Kif1a, a kinesin-3 motor) bound to β-adenylyl-imidodiphosphate (AMPPNP) or ADP (Kikkawa and Hirokawa, 2006
), three 10-12 Å maps of a C-terminal motor domain (from yeast Kar3, a kinesin-14 motor), including a strongly bound empty state (Hirose et al., 2006
), and a 9 Å map of a single motor domain of human conventional kinesin (kinesin-1, a processive dimeric motor) (Sindelar and Downing, 2007
). At these levels of resolution, it is possible to detect features such as
-helices and compare their positions with those in crystal structures by superimposing the latter as closely as possible on to the protein-density maps obtained by EM (as in Figs 3 and 4).
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| Images of kinesin-family motor domains bound to microtubules |
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4 is situated in the groove between
- and β-tubulin (see Fig. 5), whereas loop L8 and the loops at either end of
4 (L11 and L12) interact directly with tubulin (Fig. 3A,B and Fig. 4A). There is less agreement about structural changes that take place throughout the cycle. The currently available 3D data that show nucleotide-dependent structural changes are summarised in Table 1 and are described below in more detail. Tightly bound ATP-like states are most easily studied, by use of non-hydrolysable analogues such as AMPPNP to obtain MTs fully decorated with motor domains. Empty states are also usually tightly bound and occur when all free nucleotides are removed. It is most difficult to obtain full decoration in the weakly attached ADP-bound state but this may be achieved by a high motor protein concentration and low ionic strength.
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| Differences between ADP- and ATP-bound states |
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4, is also evident in the EM maps (Fig. 3B). A much smaller shift seen in different crystal structures of conventional kinesin-1 alone (Fig. 2D,E) also correlates with the position of the neck linker (Sindelar et al., 2002
4 during nucleotide exchange (see below).
An unexpected feature of the EM images of Kif1a is that
4 and its attendant loops, L11 and L12, appear as a longer rod of density in the map of the AMPPNP state, even though
4 is shorter in the AMPPNP crystal structure (see Fig. 3B). Also, the switch I loop of the superimposed crystal structure lies outside the strong density of the EM map of the ADP state, which suggests that this loop moves closer to the MT. However, the crystal structures and EM maps agree in showing the nucleotide-binding pocket of Kif1a is more open in the ADP state than in the AMPPNP state. The same is true for Kar3. The combined results from Kif1a and Kar3 clearly indicate that there is an important communication route extending via
4 and loops L11 and L12, from the nucleotide-binding pocket to the base of either the C-terminal neck-linker of a plus-end-directed kinesin (see Fig. 2D-F) or the N-terminal neck of a minus-end-directed motor (see Fig. 2A-C). As mentioned above, it has been proposed to carry the signal, during nucleotide exchange, from the active site to the neck. Alternatively or additionally, it may transmit a message in the opposite direction, from the cargo-binding region to the MT-binding region, to signal that the neck linker is docked, that there is currently no rearwards force and that the motor domain can safely detach from the MT (Rob Cross, personal communication). In myosin, the equivalent switch II helix is also thought to be a major route of communication (Vale and Milligan, 2000
). However, it connects the nucleotide-binding site to the converter domain that controls the motion of the lever arm directly, rather than via the track-binding site as in kinesin.
Another very significant difference between the two states is in the position of helix
6 (shown green in Fig. 3C), which moves closer to tubulin when an ATP analogue is bound. The maps of the minus-end-directed Kar3 suggest similar changes may occur there (Fig. 4E). Since the P-loop is situated directly below
6 (Fig. 2), a movement of
6 in either plus-end-directed or minus-end-directed motor domains could transmit a signal directly from the nucleotide-binding pocket to the neck-binding side of the motor domain and thus contribute to the docking or undocking of the neck. Such a signal might operate in addition to that proposed to act via the switch II region.
| Differences between nucleotide-bound states and the empty state |
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4 have been observed to vary in length in different crystal structures of Kif1a and it has been proposed by Nitta et al. (Nitta et al., 2004
4 coincides with ADP loss but its secondary structure is restored when ATP binds. We suggest that this refolding represents the beginning of the process of detachment, which is completed after ATP hydrolysis and Pi release.
Another large change observed in the MT-bound empty state of Kar3 is the movement of the region that includes loop L7. This loop was originally thought to be a part of the MT-binding region (Woehlke et al., 1997
), but superimposing the crystal structures on to previous EM maps showed some distance between L7 and tubulin. The new Kar3 map in the empty state shows movement of this loop toward helix H4 of β-tubulin (Fig. 4A). Since L7 interacts with the switch II loop in crystal structures, binding of the MT to L7 and the switch II helix may move the loops surrounding the nucleotide-binding pocket and trigger release of ADP.
A 3D map of conventional kinesin bound to a MT without added nucleotide (Sindelar and Downing, 2007
) has the highest resolution obtained so far (see Fig. 3A) – a remarkable achievement given that these authors found the motors to be so weakly bound that they had difficulty in keeping them attached while preparing EM grids. In contrast to the nucleotide-free Kar3 map, the kinesin-1 map shows an elongated switch II helix and no movement of L7. This could be owing to a difference between the minus-end-directed and plus-end-directed motors but it is more likely that these two structures are in different states. The reason for the weak binding to MTs reported by Sindelar and Downing is unclear, because an empty motor is normally strongly bound. The only difference in the conditions was that, during apyrase treatment to remove ATP and ADP, they exposed the motor domains to GTP, which would have bound to the kinesin nucleotide pocket (Cohn et al., 1989
) and have been hydrolysed to GDP. It is possible, though unexpected, that this bound GDP was not lost during the subsequent centrifugation through a nucleotide-free sucrose cushion and dilution with a nucleotide-free buffer. No nucleotide is detectable in the 3D map (Fig. 3A) but the resolution is too low to be sure of its absence.
When loop L7 moves in Kar3, the central β-sheet, which is associated with this loop, should also change structure and this appears to affect the `point' at the top of the sheet (Loop L10 in Fig. 2A, blue arrowheads in Fig. 4A). These changes reveal a further communication route: between the MT-binding loops and the neck. In the case of Kar3, changes in the β-sheet may lead to displacement of the neck from the site to which it docks in the ADP state. Similar changes in the β-sheet of kinesin-1 would be expected to have a different effect because of the difference in the necks (Fig. 2).
| Lower-resolution images of dimeric motors |
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Details of the interactions between the two heads have been clarified by recent studies of kinesin-tubulin complexes. Alonso et al. have shown that the `gate' allowing ADP to be released from kinesin, which is closed in the absence of tubulin, can be opened by soluble tubulin and not just by assembled MTs (Alonso et al., 2007
). An interaction with soluble tubulin had previously been observed in the case of the specialised members of the kinesin family that act as MT depolymerisers (Moores and Milligan, 2006
) but now it is clear that conventional kinesin-1 behaves similarly. Moreover, the interaction with tubulin, like that with MTs, releases ADP from only one of the heads of a kinesin dimer and the other must wait for the first to bind ATP before it can follow suit. As long as the first head is empty, it seems to shield the second head from interacting with tubulin and releasing its ADP. These results undermine models in which the so-called waiting state relies on a signal transmitted by tension produced by having both heads bound simultaneously to the MT lattice. Instead, they strongly support the idea of a direct interaction between the heads and indicate that the nucleotide-free state observed by cryo-EM corresponds to an actual stage in the cycle of processive movement (Fig. 1B; bound head at stage 2 and tethered head at stage 5). Combining these observations with the new results obtained by high-resolution EM thus leads to the idea that changes in the β-sheet of kinesin-1 may provide a parking site for the tethered head on the top of the currently active head during the time spent waiting for ATP to bind (the `dwell time') and then dislodge it when ATP binds, so that it is free to bind to the next site on the MT. Parking of the tethered head on top of the directly bound head could also send a signal in the opposite direction to allow ATP to bind.
| Conclusion/Perspectives |
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4 has been further emphasised by a 3D image of Kar3 in the tightly bound empty state, where it appears to melt on to the MT surface. In this state, loop L7 also interacts closely with tubulin, distorting the central β-sheet, which may be important in controlling the binding site on the motor domain for the neck that connects to the cargo-binding region. Both of these changes were a surprise because no equivalent state has yet been seen by X-ray crystallography and this tightly bound state has not yet been observed at high resolution for another type of motor domain.
In addition to the need for supporting images of the tightly-bound empty state, there remain many questions about the sequence of changes in tubulin-bound motor domains when ATP binds and is hydrolysed. The movement observed for helix
6, that also seems to connect the nucleotide-binding and neck regions, is intriguing and needs to be compared in more detail for plus-end-directed and minus-end-directed motors. Ideally, it would be desirable to crystallise kinesin-tubulin complexes and view the interfaces between the proteins in different states at near-atomic resolution. Failing this, there remains the hope of pushing the resolution of the EM images much higher, perhaps to 4 Å or better. The specimens used in the work reviewed here did not appear to be limiting the resolution obtainable. The number of images required to see detail at higher resolution will grow steeply but, fortunately, the human effort involved will be reduced by recently developed computer programs. In particular, being able to analyse images of 13- or 14-protofilament MTs (Li et al., 2001; Kikkawa, 2004
; Sindelar and Downing, 2007
) will help in data collection. Previous use of the rare 15-protofilament tubes, which are perfectly helical and therefore easier to analyse, meant that only a small fraction of the images recorded were used. In future it should be possible to use the majority of images.
| Footnotes |
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