Ana B. Asenjo
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
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Featured researches published by Ana B. Asenjo.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003
Ana B. Asenjo; Natan Krohn; Hernando Sosa
To understand the mechanism of kinesin movement we have investigated the relative configuration of the two kinesin motor domains during ATP hydrolysis using fluorescence polarization microscopy of ensemble and single molecules. We found that: (i) in nucleotide states that induce strong microtubule binding, both motor domains are bound to the microtubule with similar orientations; (ii) this orientation is maintained during processive motion in the presence of ATP; (iii) the neck-linker region of the motor domain has distinct configurations for each nucleotide condition tested. Our results fit well with a hand-over-hand type movement mechanism and suggest how the ATPase cycle in the two motor domains is coordinated. We propose that the motor neck-linker domain configuration controls ADP release.
Nature Cell Biology | 2011
Dong Zhang; Kyle D. Grode; Shannon Stewman; Juan Daniel Diaz-Valencia; Emily Liebling; Uttama Rath; Tania Riera; Joshua D. Currie; Daniel W. Buster; Ana B. Asenjo; Hernando J. Sosa; Jennifer L. Ross; Ao Ma; Stephen L. Rogers; David J. Sharp
Regulation of microtubule dynamics at the cell cortex is important for cell motility, morphogenesis and division. Here we show that the Drosophila katanin Dm-Kat60 functions to generate a dynamic cortical-microtubule interface in interphase cells. Dm-Kat60 concentrates at the cell cortex of S2 Drosophila cells during interphase, where it suppresses the polymerization of microtubule plus-ends, thereby preventing the formation of aberrantly dense cortical arrays. Dm-Kat60 also localizes at the leading edge of migratory D17 Drosophila cells and negatively regulates multiple parameters of their motility. Finally, in vitro, Dm-Kat60 severs and depolymerizes microtubules from their ends. On the basis of these data, we propose that Dm-Kat60 removes tubulin from microtubule lattice or microtubule ends that contact specific cortical sites to prevent stable and/or lateral attachments. The asymmetric distribution of such an activity could help generate regional variations in microtubule behaviours involved in cell migration.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006
Ana B. Asenjo; Yonatan Weinberg; Hernando Sosa
Kinesin translocation is thought to occur by a conformational change in a region of the motor domain called the neck linker. However, most evidence supporting this hypothesis comes from monomeric constructs unable to move processively. To address this issue, we investigated the neck-linker configuration on microtubule-bound monomeric and dimeric kinesin constructs using single-molecule fluorescence polarization microscopy. We found that the neck-linker region (i) is very mobile in the absence of nucleotides and during steady walking, (ii) decreases mobility and aligns along the microtubule axis in the presence of AMPPNP or ADP+AlF−4, (iii) is mostly ordered in the monomeric constructs in the presence of ADP+AlF−4, and (iv) is closer to parallel to the microtubule axis in the dimeric constructs. These results support the proposed role of the neck linker and suggest a coordination mechanism between the two motor domains in the dimer.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2006
Dongyan Tan; Ana B. Asenjo; Vito Mennella; David J. Sharp; Hernando Sosa
Kinesin is a superfamily of motor proteins that uses the energy of adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis to move and generate force along microtubules. A notable exception to this general description is found in the kinesin-13 family that actively depolymerizes microtubules rather than actively moving along them. This depolymerization activity is important in mitosis during chromosome segregation. It is still not fully clear by which mechanism kinesin-13s depolymerize microtubules. To address this issue, we used electron microscopy to investigate the interaction of kinesin-13s with microtubules. Surprisingly, we found that proteins of the kinesin-13 family form rings and spirals around microtubules. This is the first report of this type of oligomeric structure for any kinesin protein. These rings may allow kinesin-13s to stay at the ends of microtubules during depolymerization.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Ana B. Asenjo; Hernando Sosa
Kinesin1 is a motor protein that uses the energy from ATP hydrolysis to move intracellular cargoes along microtubules. It contains 2 identical motor domains, or heads, that coordinate their mechano-chemical cycles to move processively along microtubules. The molecular mechanism of coordination between head domains remains unclear, partly because of the lack of structural information on critical intermediates of the kinesin1 mechano-chemical cycle. A point of controversy has been whether before ATP binding, in the so called ATP-waiting state, 1 or 2 motor domains are bound to the microtubule. To address this issue, here we use ensemble and single molecule fluorescence polarization microscopy (FPM) to determine the mobility and orientation of the kinesin1 heads at different ATP concentrations and in heterodimeric constructs with microtubule binding impaired in 1 head. We found evidence for a mobile head during the ATP-waiting state. We incorporate our results into a model for kinesin translocation that accounts well for many reported experimental results.
Cell Reports | 2013
Ana B. Asenjo; Chandrima Chatterjee; Dongyan Tan; Vania DePaoli; William J Rice; Ruben Diaz-Avalos; Mariena Silvestry; Hernando Sosa
To elucidate the structural basis of the mechanism of microtubule depolymerization by kinesin-13s, we analyzed complexes of tubulin and the Drosophila melanogaster kinesin-13 KLP10A by electron microscopy (EM) and fluorescence polarization microscopy. We report a nanometer-resolution (1.1 nm) cryo-EM three-dimensional structure of the KLP10A head domain (KLP10AHD) bound to curved tubulin. We found that binding of KLP10AHD induces a distinct tubulin configuration with displacement (shear) between tubulin subunits in addition to curvature. In this configuration, the kinesin-binding site differs from that in straight tubulin, providing an explanation for the distinct interaction modes of kinesin-13s with the microtubule lattice or its ends. The KLP10AHD-tubulin interface comprises three areas of interaction, suggesting a crossbow-type tubulin-bending mechanism. These areas include the kinesin-13 family conserved KVD residues, and as predicted from the crossbow model, mutating these residues changes the orientation and mobility of KLP10AHDs interacting with the microtubule.
Cell Cycle | 2012
Suranjana Mukherjee; J. Daniel Diaz Valencia; Shannon Stewman; Jeremy Metz; Sylvain Monnier; Uttama Rath; Ana B. Asenjo; Rabab A. Charafeddine; Hernando Sosa; Jennifer L. Ross; Ao Ma; David J. Sharp
Fidgetin is a member of the AAA protein superfamily with important roles in mammalian development. Here we show that human Fidgetin is a potent microtubule severing and depolymerizing the enzyme used to regulate mitotic spindle architecture, dynamics and anaphase A. In vitro, recombinant human Fidgetin severs taxol-stabilized microtubules along their length and promotes depolymerization, primarily from their minus-ends. In cells, human Fidgetin targets to centrosomes, and its depletion with siRNA significantly reduces the velocity of poleward tubulin flux and anaphase A chromatid-to-pole motion. In addition, the loss of Fidgetin induces a microtubule-dependent enlargement of mitotic centrosomes and an increase in the number and length of astral microtubules. Based on these data, we propose that human Fidgetin actively suppresses microtubule growth from and attachment to centrosomes.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2009
Vito Mennella; Dongyan Tan; Daniel W. Buster; Ana B. Asenjo; Uttama Rath; Ao Ma; Hernando Sosa; David J. Sharp
Microtubule (MT)-destabilizing kinesin 13s perform fundamental roles throughout the cell cycle. In this study, we show that the Drosophila melanogaster kinesin 13, KLP10A, is phosphorylated in vivo at a conserved serine (S573) positioned within the α-helix 5 of the motor domain. In vitro, a phosphomimic KLP10A S573E mutant displays a reduced capacity to depolymerize MTs but normal affinity for the MT lattice. In cells, replacement of endogenous KLP10A with KLP10A S573E dampens MT plus end dynamics throughout the cell cycle, whereas a nonphosphorylatable S573A mutant apparently enhances activity during mitosis. Electron microscopy suggests that KLP10A S573 phosphorylation alters its association with the MT lattice, whereas molecular dynamics simulations reveal how KLP10A phosphorylation can alter the kinesin–MT interface without changing important structural features within the motor’s core. Finally, we identify casein kinase 1α as a possible candidate for KLP10A phosphorylation. We propose a model in which phosphorylation of the KLP10A motor domain provides a regulatory switch controlling the time and place of MT depolymerization.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Dong Zhang; Ana B. Asenjo; Michaela Greenbaum; Luping Xie; David J. Sharp; Hernando Sosa
Kinesin-13s are microtubule (MT) depolymerases different from most other kinesins that move along MTs. Like other kinesins, they have a motor or head domain (HD) containing a tubulin and an ATP binding site. Interestingly, kinesin-13s have an additional binding site (Kin-Tub-2) on the opposite side of the HD that contains several family conserved positively charged residues. The role of this site in kinesin-13 function is not clear. To address this issue, we investigated the in-vitro and in-vivo effects of mutating Kin-Tub-2 family conserved residues on the Drosophila melanogaster kinesin-13, KLP10A. We show that the Kin-Tub-2 site enhances tubulin cross-linking and MT bundling properties of KLP10A in-vitro. Disruption of the Kin-Tub-2 site, despite not having a deleterious effect on MT depolymerization, results in abnormal mitotic spindles and lagging chromosomes during mitosis in Drosophila S2 cells. The results suggest that the additional Kin-Tub-2 tubulin biding site plays a direct MT attachment role in-vivo.
Methods in Cell Biology | 2010
Hernando Sosa; Ana B. Asenjo; Erwin J.G. Peterman
Fluorescence polarization microscopy (FPM) is the analysis of the polarization of light in a fluorescent microscope in order to determine the angular orientation and rotational mobility of fluorescent molecules. Key advantages of FPM, relative to other structural analysis techniques, are that it allows the detection of conformational changes of fluorescently labeled macromolecules in real time in physiological conditions and at the single-molecule level. In this chapter we describe in detail the FPM experimental set-up and analysis methods we have used to investigate structural intermediates of the motor protein kinesin-1 associated with its walking mechanism along microtubules. We also briefly describe additional FPM methods that have been used to investigate other macromolecular complexes.