Microtubules II (Lecture 21) Flashcards
What are the 2 microtubule based motor proteins.
Kinesins and dyneins
True or False: Kinesins and dyneins move along microtubules using ATP hydrolysis as the power source
True
True or False: Organelles move along microtubules in any direction.
True
Most kinesins power transport toward the + end of the microtubule other then _______.
Kinesin 14
True or False: Kinesin-1 always transports vesicles from the (−) end to the (+) end of a stationary microtubule.
True
What kinesin is not a motor?
Kinesin 13
What kinesin acts to slide?
Kinesin 5
In kinesin 1, the head take ______ steps form - to +
16 nm
What are the 4 steps to the kinesin cycle?
Start: Leading head with no nucleotide bound is tightly associated with the microtubule. Trailing head with ADP bound is weakly associated with the microtubule.
Step 1: Original leading head binds ATP.
Step 2: Yellow linker region swings forward and docks onto the surface of its associated head domain, thrusting the trailing head forward.
Step 3: The new leading head binds weakly to a site 16 nm toward the microtubule (+) end.
Step 4: New leading head releases ADP and binds tightly to the microtubule. New trailing head hydrolyzes ATP to ADP and Pi. Pi is released and converts trailing head into a weak-MT binding state.
What is the inhibited form of kinesin 1
Head tail interaction
What are the 3 steps to Kinesin 1-regulation.
Step 1: Motor binding to vesicle receptor unfolds kinesin, activating ATPase activity
Step 2: Transports cargo toward the (+) end of a microtubule
Cargo release: Not yet clear how the motor dissociates from the cargo and folds back into the inhibited state
Cytoplasmic ______ transports organelles retrograde, toward the (-) end of microtubules
dynein
True or False: Dynein is ATP-dependent, a very large protein and not very diverse compared to myosin and kinesins.
True
Cytoplasmic dynein has ______ AAA ATPase in head.
6
The ______ is the ATP-dependent change in the position of the linker causes movement of the microtubule-binding stalk.
Force-generation mechanism