What are Motor Proteins?[Edit]
Motor proteins, such as myosins and kinesins, move along cytoskeletal filaments via a force-dependent mechanism that is driven by the hydrolysis of ATP molecules (reviewed in [1]). Nucleotide hydrolysis and controlled inorganic phosphate release by motor proteins causes restructuring of core domains that control the association of the motor protein with the filaments, other proteins, and the fresh supply of nucleotides.
Motor proteins propel themselves along the cytoskeleton using a mechanochemical cycle of filament binding, conformational change, filament release, conformation reversal, and filament rebinding. In most cases, the conformational change(s) on the motor protein prevents subsequent nucleotide binding and/or hydrolysis until the prior round of hydrolysis and release is complete.
Controlled hydrolysis of nucleotides and inorganic phosphate release by motor proteins can generate mechanical forces that can be used for:
* Translocating the motor proteins themselves along the filaments
* stabilizing and/or moving the filaments (i.e., contractile stress fibers) & escorting cargo that is attached to the motor protein (e.g., vesicles, organelles, other proteins) to specific regions in the cell
* In most cases, motor proteins transport substances in a particular direction, or polarity, along the filaments. This directionality is achieved by specific conformational changes that allow movement in only one direction.
Controlled hydrolysis of nucleotides and inorganic phosphate release by motor proteins can generate mechanical forces that can be used for:
* Translocating the motor proteins themselves along the filaments
* stabilizing and/or moving the filaments (i.e., contractile stress fibers) & escorting cargo that is attached to the motor protein (e.g., vesicles, organelles, other proteins) to specific regions in the cell
* In most cases, motor proteins transport substances in a particular direction, or polarity, along the filaments. This directionality is achieved by specific conformational changes that allow movement in only one direction.