Motor generated torque drives coupled yawing and orbital rotations of kinesin coated gold nanorods

Commun Biol. 2022 Dec 20;5(1):1368. doi: 10.1038/s42003-022-04304-w.

Abstract

Kinesin motor domains generate impulses of force and movement that have both translational and rotational (torque) components. Here, we ask how the torque component influences function in cargo-attached teams of weakly processive kinesins. Using an assay in which kinesin-coated gold nanorods (kinesin-GNRs) translocate on suspended microtubules, we show that for both single-headed KIF1A and dimeric ZEN-4, the intensities of polarized light scattered by the kinesin-GNRs in two orthogonal directions periodically oscillate as the GNRs crawl towards microtubule plus ends, indicating that translocating kinesin-GNRs unidirectionally rotate about their short (yaw) axes whilst following an overall left-handed helical orbit around the microtubule axis. For orientations of the GNR that generate a signal, the period of this short axis rotation corresponds to two periods of the overall helical trajectory. Torque force thus drives both rolling and yawing of near-spherical cargoes carrying rigidly-attached weakly processive kinesins, with possible relevance to intracellular transport.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Gold
  • Kinesins*
  • Microtubules
  • Nanotubes*
  • Torque

Substances

  • Kinesins
  • Gold