
Kinesin walks the line: single motors observed by atomic force microscopy.
Motor proteins of the kinesin family move actively along microtubules to transport cargo within cells. How exactly a single motor proceeds on the 13 narrow lanes or protofilaments of a microtubule has not been visualized directly, and there persists controversy on the relative position of the two kinesin heads in different nucleotide states. We have succeeded in imaging Kinesin-1 dimers immobilized on microtubules with single-head resolution by atomic force microscopy. Moreover, we could catch glimpses of single Kinesin-1 dimers in their motion along microtubules with nanometer resolution. We find in our experiments that frequently both heads of one dimer are microtubule-bound at submicromolar ATP concentrations. Furthermore, we could unambiguously resolve that both heads bind to the same protofilament, instead of straddling two, and remain on this track during processive movement.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Protein Transport
- Protein Multimerization
- Protein Binding
- Neurospora crassa
- Microtubules
- Microscopy, Atomic Force
- Kinesins
- Immobilized Proteins
- Humans
- Computer Simulation
Citation

Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Protein Transport
- Protein Multimerization
- Protein Binding
- Neurospora crassa
- Microtubules
- Microscopy, Atomic Force
- Kinesins
- Immobilized Proteins
- Humans
- Computer Simulation