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1.
Small ; 18(32): e2107854, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35815940

ABSTRACT

Cilia and flagella are beating rod-like organelles that enable the directional movement of microorganisms in fluids and fluid transport along the surface of biological organisms or inside organs. The molecular motor axonemal dynein drives their beating by interacting with microtubules. Constructing synthetic beating systems with axonemal dynein capable of mimicking ciliary beating still represents a major challenge. Here, the bottom-up engineering of a sustained beating synthoneme consisting of a pair of microtubules connected by a series of periodic arrays of approximately eight axonemal dyneins is reported. A model leads to the understanding of the motion through the cooperative, cyclic association-dissociation of the molecular motor from the microtubules. The synthoneme represents a bottom-up self-organized bio-molecular machine at the nanoscale with cilia-like properties.


Subject(s)
Axonemal Dyneins , Axoneme , Axonemal Dyneins/metabolism , Axoneme/metabolism , Cilia/metabolism , Dyneins/metabolism , Flagella/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism
2.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 523(4): 1014-1019, 2020 03 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31973818

ABSTRACT

Dynein motor proteins usually work as a group in vesicle transport, mitosis, and ciliary/flagellar beating inside cells. Despite the obvious importance of the functions of dynein, the effect of inter-dynein interactions on collective motility remains poorly understood due to the difficulty in building large dynein ensembles with defined geometry. Here, we describe a method to build dynein ensembles to investigate the collective motility of dynein on microtubules. Using electron microscopy, we show that tens to hundreds of cytoplasmic dynein monomers were anchored along a 4- or 10-helix DNA nanotube with an average periodicity of 19 or 44 nm (a programmed periodicity of 14 or 28 nm, respectively). They drove the sliding movement of DNA nanotubes along microtubules at a velocity of 170-620 nm/s. Reducing the stiffness of DNA nanotubes made the nanotube movement discontinuous and considerably slower. Decreasing the spacing between motors simply slowed down the nanotube movement. This slowdown was independent of the number of motors involved but heavily dependent on motor-motor distance. This suggests that steric hindrance or mechanical coupling between dynein molecules was responsible for the slowdown. Furthermore, we observed cyclical buckling of DNA nanotubes on microtubules, reminiscent of ciliary/flagellar beating. These results highlight the importance of the geometric arrangement of dynein motors on their collective motility.


Subject(s)
DNA/metabolism , Dyneins/metabolism , Nanotubes/chemistry , DNA/ultrastructure , Dyneins/ultrastructure , Humans , Microtubules/metabolism , Microtubules/ultrastructure , Nanotubes/ultrastructure , Protein Transport , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism
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