Mechanical control of the directional stepping dynamics of the kinesin motor
Changbong Hyeon, Jos\'e N. Onuchic

TL;DR
This study uses structural modeling to investigate the real-time stepping dynamics of kinesin, revealing how the rate of conformational change influences the presence of substeps and intermediate states during its 8-nm movement along microtubules.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed computational analysis linking power stroke rate to stepping substructure and intermediate conformations in kinesin's movement.
Findings
Faster power strokes (>20 microsec) eliminate observable substeps.
Slower power strokes (<20 microsec) produce detectable substeps indicating transient intermediates.
Identification of a sideway binding intermediate trapped in neighboring protofilament.
Abstract
Among the multiple steps constituting the kinesin's mechanochemical cycle, one of the most interesting events is observed when kinesins move an 8-nm step from one microtubule (MT)-binding site to another. The stepping motion that occurs within a relatively short time scale (~100 microsec) is, however, beyond the resolution of current experiments, therefore a basic understanding to the real-time dynamics within the 8-nm step is still lacking. For instance, the rate of power stroke (or conformational change), that leads to the undocked-to-docked transition of neck-linker, is not known, and the existence of a substep during the 8-nm step still remains a controversial issue in the kinesin community. By using explicit structures of the kinesin dimer and the MT consisting of 13 protofilaments (PFs), we study the stepping dynamics with varying rates of power stroke (kp). We estimate that 1/kp…
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