6s9a
From Proteopedia
Artificial GTPase-BSE dimer of human Dynamin1
Structural highlights
FunctionDYN1_HUMAN Microtubule-associated force-producing protein involved in producing microtubule bundles and able to bind and hydrolyze GTP. Most probably involved in vesicular trafficking processes. Involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis. Publication Abstract from PubMedDynamin oligomerizes into helical filaments on tubular membrane templates and, through constriction, cleaves them in a GTPase-driven way. Structural observations of GTP-dependent cross-bridges between neighboring filament turns have led to the suggestion that dynamin operates as a molecular ratchet motor. However, the proof of such mechanism remains absent. Particularly, it is not known whether a powerful enough stroke is produced and how the motor modules would cooperate in the constriction process. Here, we characterized the dynamin motor modules by single-molecule Forster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) and found strong nucleotide-dependent conformational preferences. Integrating smFRET with molecular dynamics simulations allowed us to estimate the forces generated in a power stroke. Subsequently, the quantitative force data and the measured kinetics of the GTPase cycle were incorporated into a model including both a dynamin filament, with explicit motor cross-bridges, and a realistic deformable membrane template. In our simulations, collective constriction of the membrane by dynamin motor modules, based on the ratchet mechanism, is directly reproduced and analyzed. Functional parallels between the dynamin system and actomyosin in the muscle are seen. Through concerted action of the motors, tight membrane constriction to the hemifission radius can be reached. Our experimental and computational study provides an example of how collective motor action in megadalton molecular assemblies can be approached and explicitly resolved. Quantification and demonstration of the collective constriction-by-ratchet mechanism in the dynamin molecular motor.,Ganichkin OM, Vancraenenbroeck R, Rosenblum G, Hofmann H, Mikhailov AS, Daumke O, Noel JK Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Jul 13;118(28). pii: 2101144118. doi:, 10.1073/pnas.2101144118. PMID:34244431[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
|