| Literature DB >> 25072053 |
Abstract
Non-muscle myosin II motor proteins (myosin IIA, myosin IIB, and myosin IIC) belong to a class of molecular motor proteins that are known to transduce cellular free-energy into biological work more efficiently than man-made combustion engines. Nature has given a single myosin II motor protein for lower eukaryotes and multiple for mammals but none for plants in order to provide impetus for their life. These specialized nanomachines drive cellular activities necessary for embryogenesis, organogenesis, and immunity. However, these multifunctional myosin II motor proteins are believed to go awry due to unknown reasons and contribute for the onset and progression of many autosomal-dominant disorders, cataract, deafness, infertility, cancer, kidney, neuronal, and inflammatory diseases. Many pathogens like HIV, Dengue, hepatitis C, and Lymphoma viruses as well as Salmonella and Mycobacteria are now known to take hostage of these dedicated myosin II motor proteins for their efficient pathogenesis. Even after four decades since their discovery, we still have a limited knowledge of how these motor proteins drive cell migration and cytokinesis. We need to enrich our current knowledge on these fundamental cellular processes and develop novel therapeutic strategies to fix mutated myosin II motor proteins in pathological conditions. This is the time to think how to relieve the hijacked myosins from pathogens in order to provide a renewed impetus for patients' life. Understanding how to steer these molecular motors in proliferating and differentiating stem cells will improve stem cell based-therapeutics development. Given the plethora of cellular activities non-muscle myosin motor proteins are involved in, their importance is apparent for human life.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cell migration; cytokinesis; microparticles; molecular machines; motor proteins; myosin II; pathogenesis
Year: 2014 PMID: 25072053 PMCID: PMC4083560 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2014.00045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1Non-muscle myosin II motor proteins. Schematic representation of myosin II motor proteins that exist as complexes in cells.
Figure 2Mechanism of the activation of myosin II motor proteins. RLC phosphorylation by MLCK and ROCK or other kinases turns on myosin II motor protein in vivo.
Figure 3Myosin II motor proteins-mediated mechanotransduction in cells. Several myosin II heavy chain specific protein kinases activate myosin II motor proteins. The activated myosin II associates with actin filaments to generate contractile forces using cellular ATP.
Defects and associated diseases of myosin II motor proteins and their regulators.
| R702C/H R1165C/L and many | MYH9RD (May-Hegglin anomaly, Sebastian platelet syndrome, Fetchner, Bernard-Soulier syndrome, Alport syndrome, Epstein syndrome) | Thrombocytopenia, enlarged platelets, deafness, cataract, nephritis, and Döhle-like inclusions. | |
| Anaplastic large cell lymphoma | Blood cancer, painless swelling of lymph nodes, and rapid weight loss. | ||
| Overexpression | Cancer metastasis | – | |
| E908X ( | Microcephaly, hydrocephalus, cerebral and cerebellar atrophy | Small head, dwarfism or short stature, delayed motor, and speech functions. | |
| Downregulation | Megakaryopoiesis, myocardial infarction, demyelination, Batten disease | Chest pain, dizziness, nausea, ocular paralysis, speech problem, and impaired vision. | |
| S7X, S120L, G376C, R726S, L976F | Hereditary blindness, hearing impairment (DFNA4), peripheral neuropathy, myopathy, hoarseness | Deafness, loss of vision, burning pain, numbness, changes in skin, hair or nail, dizziness, and paralysis. | |
| Aberrant splicing | Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) or Steinert disease | Weakness. | |
| Overexpression | Cancer metastasis | – | |
| Overexpression | Cancer metastasis | – | |
| Δ2–46, S66A, S67A | Impairment of courtship | Inability of a fly to sing a courtship song. | |
| G601E | Cancer | – | |
| P147S | Asthma | – | |
| SNP | Asthma, acute lung injury, sepsis | – | |
| L101P, L170P, Y199X, Q295K | Seizures, dementia, and psychomotor disturbances | Loss of vision and memory, mood swings, poor judgment. | |
| R56X, S141L, R484X, S590X, Δ427–429, Δ736–737, Δ1260–1280 | Seizures, Hypocalcemia, tetany, hypomagnesemia | Abnormal eye movement, convulsions, fatigue, numbness, anxiety, depression, dementia. | |
| Δ17p11.2 | Smith-Magenis Syndrome | Intellectual disability, sleep disturbances, behavior problems, defects in many body parts. |
Refer Burt et al. (,
Found in the lymphocytes of lymphoma patients,
Implicated,
Encodes RLC in Drosophila,
Interacts directly with myosin IIB, Δ deletion, SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism;
LLgl, located region in chromosome 17.