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Structure of a genetically engineered molecular motor (2001)

Abstract
Molecular motors move unidirectionally along polymer tracks, producing movement and force in an ATP-dependent fashion. They achieve this by amplifying small conformational changes in the nucleotide-binding region into force-generating movements of larger protein domains. We present the 2.8 Å resolution crystal structure of an artificial actin-based motor. By combining the catalytic domain of myosin II with a 130 Å conformational amplifier consisting of repeats 1 and 2 of α-actinin, we demonstrate that it is possible to genetically engineer single-polypeptide molecular motors with precisely defined lever arm lengths and specific motile properties. Furthermore, our structure shows the consequences of mutating a conserved salt bridge in the nucleotide-binding region. Disruption of this salt bridge, which is known to severely inhibit ATP hydrolysis activity, appears to interfere with formation of myosins catalytically active closed conformation. Finally, we describe the structure of -actinin repeats 1 and 2 as being composed of two rigid, triple-helical bundles linked by an uninterrupted -helix. This fold is very similar to the previously described structures of -actinin repeats 2 and 3, and -spectrin repeats 16 and 17.

Publication details
Download http://edoc.mpg.de/22949
Repository Max Planck Society - eDocument Server (Germany)
Keywords &aplha;-actinin; Dictyostelium discoideum; lever arm; myosin; protein engineering
Type Article
Language English