| Literature DB >> 14765199 |
Georgios Tsiavaliaris1, Setsuko Fujita-Becker, Dietmar J Manstein.
Abstract
All members of the diverse myosin superfamily have a highly conserved globular motor domain that contains the actin- and nucleotide-binding sites and produces force and movement. The light-chain-binding domain connects the motor domain to a variety of functionally specialized tail domains and amplifies small structural changes in the motor domain through rotation of a lever arm. Myosins move on polarized actin filaments either forwards to the barbed (+) or backwards to the pointed (-) end. Here, we describe the engineering of an artificial backwards-moving myosin from three pre-existing molecular building blocks. These blocks are: a forward-moving class I myosin motor domain, a directional inverter formed by a four-helix bundle segment of human guanylate-binding protein-1 and an artificial lever arm formed by two alpha-actinin repeats. Our results prove that reverse-direction movement of myosins can be achieved simply by rotating the direction of the lever arm 180 degrees.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 14765199 DOI: 10.1038/nature02303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962