Title: Filament depolymerization by motor proteins
1Filament depolymerization by motor proteins
Meredith D. Betterton Physics Department Universit
y of Colorado at Boulder Collaborators Dick
McIntosh (MCDB) Loren Hough (MCDB) Matt Glaser
(Physics) Anne Schwabe (Biochem)
2Intracellular transport in neurons
- Proteins manufactured in cell center move to cell
edge - Spine to fingertip distance 1 m
- Typical protein size 3 nm
3Kinesin and microtubules
- First discovered function intracellular
transport
Highways microtubules 20-nm filaments
Transporter kinesin Walks on microtubules
13 protofilaments
8-nm dimer
4Conventional kinesin
Kinesin walks on microtubules with 8-nm
steps Burns chemical fuel (ATP hydrolysis) Transpo
rts proteins, wastes within cell Takes 3 weeks to
move 1 meter with v 30 µm/min
Movie Gelles lab, Brandeis
5Kinesins that promote MT depolymerization
- Kinesin-8 and kinesin-13 proteins
- Can promote disassembly of microtubules
- Help regulate MT length in the mitotic spindle
-
http//www.ornl.gov/sci/ismv/images/factsheets/fs-
bio/spindle1.gif
6Kinesin family
- Conventional kinesin kinesin 1
- Kinesin-13 family includes kinesin 13 and
kinesin 8
Dagenbach and Endow, http//www.proweb.org/kinesin
/KinesinTree.html
7Kinesin 13 proteins and the mitotic spindle
- Example MCAK
- Mitotic Centromere-Associated Kinesin
- When depleted in Xenopus extracts, MTs become
very long - Red MTs
- Blue DNA
- Scale 20 microns
Walczak, Mitchison and Desai, Cell 84, 37 (1996)
8 MCAK in vitro
- Localizes to microtubule ends
- Promotes MT disassembly
- Hydrolyzes ATP preferentially at ends
- Reaches MT ends by 1D diffusion
Hunter et al., Mol Cell 11, 445 (2003)
http//www.mpi-cbg.de/research/groups/howard/proje
cts.html
9Relationship to Soft Active Matter?
- Active gel theory typically assumes
- Fixed length filaments
- Motors are active crosslinks
- Extensions to include filament length
fluctuations?
http//www.nat.vu.nl/fcm/news1.htm
10New features of the problem
- Key differences from traditional problems in
motor protein motion - Many motors move on filament and interact
- Collective effects important
- Filament dynamics important
- Coupled dynamics of motors and track
- Transient dynamics
Parmeggiani, Franosch, and Frey, Phys Rev E 70,
046101 (2004) Klein et al., Phys Rev Lett 94,
108102 (2005) Nowak, Fok, and Chou, Phys Rev E
76, 031135 (2007) Govindan, Gopalakrishnan, and
Chowdhury, EPL 83, 40006 (2008).
11Experimental results
In cells deleting kinesin-8 genes leads to long
MTs and defects in mitosis West et al., Mol Biol
Cell 12, 3919 (2001) West, Malmstrom, and
McIntosh, J Cell Sci 115, 931 (2002). Mayr et
al., Curr Biol 17, 488 (2007) Garcia, Koonrugsa,
and Toda, Curr Biol 12, 610 (2002) Garcia,
Koonrugsa, and Toda, EMBO J 21, 6015 (2002)
Buster, Zhang, and Sharp, Mol Biol Cell 18, 3094
(2007). In purified systems kinesin-8 proteins
move on MTs and promote MT depolymerization Gupta
et al., Nat Cell Biol 8, 913 (2006) Varga et
al., Nat Cell Biol 8, 957 (2006). Kinesin-8s
involved in chromosome oscillations and MT length
fluctuations Stumpff et al., Devel Cell 14, 252
(2008) Unsworth et al., Mol Biol Cell published
online (2008)
12Kinesin 8 protein Kip3p
- Kinesin 8 from budding yeast
- Promotes MT depolymerization from plus ends
- Motor activity toward MT plus end
- Length-dependent MT depolymerization
Varga et al., Nat Cell Biol 8, 957 (2006)
13Kinesin 8 protein Kip3p
- Depolymerization rate decreases as MTs become
shorter - Slower rates for lower motor concentration
- Potential new mechanism for MT length regulation
Varga et al., Nat Cell Biol 8, 957 (2006)
14Theory of kinesin-8 motion and MT depolymerization
- What controls the length-dependent
depolymerization? - Over what lengths does LDP occur?
- What parameters control the length?
Hough, Schwabe, Glaser, McIntosh, and Betterton,
Biophys J 96, 3050 (2009)
15Kinesin-8 motors on MTs
- Features
- Binding to/unbinding from tubulin dimers
throughout MT - Biased motion toward MT plus end
- Binding to/unbinding from MT plus end
- MT dynamics without motors
16Motor at MT end
- Motor at end promotes MT depolymerization
- Can be processive or nonprocessive
- Motor crowding reduces processivity
17Protofilament interactions
- Typical MT has 13 protofilaments
- Depolymerization rate could depend on number of
lateral neighbors
18Tools
- Monte Carlo simulations of full model
- Mean-field theory
- Analysis along length of MT
- Analysis at MT plus end only
19Steady-state motor distribution
- Fixed-length MT
- Exponential near minus end
- Constant in bulk
- Clump at plus end
20Depolymerization rate versus length
- For short enough MTs the depolymerization rate
must drop - Crossover length increases with decreasing motor
concentration - Note motors pre-equilibrated
21Define crossover length d
- Determine MT length when depolymerization rate
drops by 20 from steady-state value - Mean-field model agrees
- Phase diagram to compare to experiments
22Define crossover length d
- Determine MT length when depolymerization rate
drops by 20 from steady-state value - Mean-field model agrees
- Phase diagram to compare to experiments
- May explain differences between experiments?
23Conclusions
- Minimal model of MT depolymerization by kinesin-8
motors - Length-dependent depolymerization strongly
dependent on motor concentration and initial
conditions
Hough, Schwabe, Glaser, McIntosh, and Betterton,
Biophys J 96, 3050 (2009)
24Speculation on recent in vivo data
- Puzzling experimental results
- Depleting kinesin-8 increases amplitude of
chromosome oscillations - Deleting kinesin-8 decreases MT length
fluctuations - Our fluctuation results could explain this
- Motors promote MT length fluctuations
- Lower (but nonzero) concentration of motors leads
to larger fluctuations
Stumpff et al., Devel Cell 14, 252 (2008)
Unsworth et al., Mol Biol Cell published online
(2008)