Tug-of-war between dissimilar teams of microtubule motors regulates transport and fission of endosomes

Soppina, Virupakshi ; Rai, Arpan Kumar ; Ramaiya, Avin Jayesh ; Barak, Pradeep ; Mallik, Roop (2009) Tug-of-war between dissimilar teams of microtubule motors regulates transport and fission of endosomes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106 (46). pp. 19381-19386. ISSN 0027-8424

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Official URL: http://www.pnas.org/content/106/46/19381.abstract

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0906524106

Abstract

Intracellular transport is interspersed with frequent reversals in direction due to the presence of opposing kinesin and dynein motors on organelles that are carried as cargo. The cause and the mechanism of reversals are unknown, but are a key to understanding how cargos are delivered in a regulated manner to specific cellular locations. Unlike established single-motor biophysical assays, this problem requires understanding of the cooperative behavior of multiple interacting motors. Here we present measurements inside live Dictyostelium cells, in a cell extract and with purified motors to quantify such an ensemble function of motors. We show through precise motion analysis that reversals during endosome motion are caused by a tug-of-war between kinesin and dynein. Further, we use a combination of optical trap-based force measurements and Monte Carlo simulations to make the surprising discovery that endosome transport uses many (approximately four to eight) weak and detachment-prone dyneins in a tug-of-war against a single strong and tenacious kinesin. We elucidate how this clever choice of dissimilar motors and motor teams achieves net transport together with endosome fission, both of which are important in controlling the balance of endocytic sorting. To the best of our knowledge, this is a unique demonstration that dynein and kinesin function differently at the molecular level inside cells and of how this difference is used in a specific cellular process, namely endosome biogenesis. Our work may provide a platform to understand intracellular transport of a variety of organelles in terms of measurable quantities.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to National Academy of Sciences.
Keywords:Asymmetric Motor Competition; Coordination of Motors; Molecular Motor Dynein Kinesin; Regulation of Bidirectional Motion
ID Code:109312
Deposited On:10 Oct 2017 13:16
Last Modified:10 Oct 2017 13:16

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