Publication | Open Access
The Aspergillus nidulans Kinesin-3 Tail Is Necessary and Sufficient to Recognize Modified Microtubules
15
Citations
28
References
2012
Year
Posttranslational Microtubule ModificationsFungal Cell BiologyMolecular BiologyKinesin 1CytoskeletonFungal BiologyModified MtsProteomicsProtein FunctionBiochemistryFungal PhysiologyProtein TransportModified MicrotubulesBiologyNatural SciencesMicrobiologyIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistryCellular StructureMedicine
Posttranslational microtubule modifications (PTMs) are numerous; however, the biochemical and cell biological roles of those modifications remain mostly an enigma. The Aspergillus nidulans kinesin-3 UncA uses preferably modified microtubules (MTs) as tracks for vesicle transportation. Here, we show that a positively charged region in the tail of UncA (amino acids 1316 to 1402) is necessary for the recognition of modified MTs. Chimeric proteins composed of the kinesin-1 motor domain and the UncA tail displayed the same specificity as UncA, suggesting that the UncA tail is sufficient to establish specificity. Interaction between the UncA tail and alpha-tubulin was shown using a yeast two-hybrid assay and in A. nidulans by bimolecular fluorescence complementation. This is the first demonstration of how a kinesin-3 motor protein distinguishes among different MT populations in fungal cells, and how specificity determination depends on the tail rather than the motor domain, as has been demonstrated for kinesin 1 in neuronal cells.
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