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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(28): e2120193119, 2022 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35867749

ABSTRACT

Coupling of motor proteins within arrays drives muscle contraction, flagellar beating, chromosome segregation, and other biological processes. Current models of motor coupling invoke either direct mechanical linkage or protein crowding, which rely on short-range motor-motor interactions. In contrast, coupling mechanisms that act at longer length scales remain largely unexplored. Here we report that microtubules can physically couple motor movement in the absence of detectable short-range interactions. The human kinesin-4 Kif4A changes the run length and velocity of other motors on the same microtubule in the dilute binding limit, when approximately 10-nm-sized motors are much farther apart than the motor size. This effect does not depend on specific motor-motor interactions because similar changes in Kif4A motility are induced by kinesin-1 motors. A micrometer-scale attractive interaction potential between motors is sufficient to recreate the experimental results in a biophysical model. Unexpectedly, our theory suggests that long-range microtubule-mediated coupling affects not only binding kinetics but also motor mechanochemistry. Therefore, the model predicts that motors can sense and respond to motors bound several micrometers away on a microtubule. Our results are consistent with a paradigm in which long-range motor interactions along the microtubule enable additional forms of collective motor behavior, possibly due to changes in the microtubule lattice.


Subject(s)
Kinesins , Microtubules , Movement , Humans , Kinesins/chemistry , Kinetics , Microtubules/chemistry , Protein Binding
2.
Nat Chem Biol ; 17(9): 964-974, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34083810

ABSTRACT

A remarkable feature of the microtubule cytoskeleton is the coexistence of subpopulations having different dynamic properties. A prominent example is the anaphase spindle, where stable antiparallel bundles exist alongside dynamic microtubules and provide spatial cues for cytokinesis. How are the dynamics of spatially proximal arrays differentially regulated? We reconstitute a minimal system of three midzone proteins: microtubule-crosslinker PRC1 and its interactors CLASP1 and Kif4A, proteins that promote and suppress microtubule elongation, respectively. We find that their collective activity promotes elongation of single microtubules while simultaneously stalling polymerization of crosslinked bundles. This differentiation arises from (1) strong rescue activity of CLASP1, which overcomes the weaker effects of Kif4A on single microtubules, and (2) lower microtubule- and PRC1-binding affinity of CLASP1, which permits the dominance of Kif4A at overlaps. In addition to canonical mechanisms where antagonistic regulators set microtubule length, our findings illuminate design principles by which collective regulator activity creates microenvironments of arrays with distinct dynamic properties.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Kinesins/metabolism , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism , Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics , Cell Cycle Proteins/isolation & purification , Humans , Kinesins/genetics , Kinesins/isolation & purification , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/isolation & purification
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