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    Kinesin-2 KIF3AC and KIF3AB Can Drive Long-Range Transport along Microtubules

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    AbstractMammalian KIF3AC is classified as a heterotrimeric kinesin-2 that is best known for organelle transport in neurons, yet inĀ vitro studies to characterize its single molecule behavior are lacking. The results presented show that a KIF3AC motor that includes the native helix Ī±7 sequence for coiled-coil formation is highly processive with run lengths of āˆ¼1.23 Ī¼m and matching those exhibited by conventional kinesin-1. This result was unexpected because KIF3AC exhibits the canonical kinesin-2 neck-linker sequence that has been reported to be responsible for shorter run lengths observed for another heterotrimeric kinesin-2, KIF3AB. However, KIF3AB with its native neck linker and helix Ī±7 is also highly processive with run lengths of āˆ¼1.62 Ī¼m and exceeding those of KIF3AC and kinesin-1. Loop L11, a component of the microtubule-motor interface and implicated in activating ADP release upon microtubule collision, is significantly extended in KIF3C as compared with other kinesins. A KIF3AC encoding a truncation in KIF3C loop L11 (KIF3ACĪ”L11) exhibited longer run lengths at āˆ¼1.55 Ī¼m than wild-type KIF3AC and were more similar to KIF3AB run lengths, suggesting that L11 also contributes to tuning motor processivity. The steady-state ATPase results show that shortening L11 does not alter kcat, consistent with the observation that single molecule velocities are not affected by this truncation. However, shortening loop L11 of KIF3C significantly increases the microtubule affinity of KIF3ACĪ”L11, revealing another structural and mechanistic property that can modulate processivity. The results presented provide new, to our knowledge, insights to understand structure-function relationships governing processivity and a better understanding of the potential of KIF3AC for long-distance transport in neurons
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