The kinesin-5 tail and bipolar minifilament domains are the origin of its microtubule crosslinking and sliding activity

Stanley Nithianantham, Malina K. Iwanski, Ignas Gaska, Himanshu Pandey, Tatyana Bodrug, Sayaka Inagaki, Jennifer Major, Gary J. Brouhard, Larissa Gheber, Steven S. Rosenfeld, Scott Forth, Adam G. Hendricks, Jawdat Al-Bassam

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Kinesin-5 crosslinks and slides apart microtubules to assemble, elongate, and maintain the mitotic spindle. Kinesin-5 is a tetramer, where two N-terminal motor domains are positioned at each end of the motor, and the coiled-coil stalk domains are organized into a tetrameric bundle through the bipolar assembly (BASS) domain. To dissect the function of the individual structural elements of the motor, we constructed a minimal kinesin-5 tetramer (mini-tetramer). We determined the x-ray structure of the extended, 34-nm BASS domain. Guided by these structural studies, we generated active bipolar kinesin-5 mini-tetramer motors from Drosophila melanogastor and human orthologues which are half the length of native kinesin-5. We then used these kinesin-5 mini-tetramers to examine the role of two unique structural adaptations of kinesin-5: 1) the length and flexibility of the tetramer, and 2) the C-terminal tails which interact with the motor domains to coordinate their ATPase activity. The C-terminal domain causes frequent pausing and clustering of kinesin-5. By comparing microtubule crosslinking and sliding by mini-tetramer and full-length kinesin-5, we find that both the length and flexibility of kinesin-5 and the C-terminal tails govern its ability to crosslink microtubules. Once crosslinked, stiffer mini-tetramers slide antiparallel microtubules more efficiently than full-length motors.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberar111
JournalMolecular biology of the cell
Volume34
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2023

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Molecular Biology
  • Cell Biology

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