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Dive into the research topics where Guy G. Kennedy is active.

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Featured researches published by Guy G. Kennedy.


Biophysical Journal | 1997

Smooth muscle and skeletal muscle myosins produce similar unitary forces and displacements in the laser trap.

William H. Guilford; D. E. Dupuis; Guy G. Kennedy; J. Wu; Joseph B. Patlak; David M. Warshaw

Purified smooth muscle myosin in the in vitro motility assay propels actin filaments at 1/10 the velocity, yet produces 3-4 times more force than skeletal muscle myosin. At the level of a single myosin molecule, these differences in force and actin filament velocity may be reflected in the size and duration of single motion and force-generating events, or in the kinetics of the cross-bridge cycle. Specifically, an increase in either unitary force or duty cycle may explain the enhanced force-generating capacity of smooth muscle myosin. Similarly, an increase in attached time or decrease in unitary displacement may explain the reduced actin filament velocity of smooth muscle myosin. To discriminate between these possibilities, we used a laser trap to measure unitary forces and displacements from single smooth and skeletal muscle myosin molecules. We analyzed our data using mean-variance analysis, which does not rely on scoring individual events by eye, and emphasizes periods in the data with constant properties. Both myosins demonstrated multiple but similar event populations with discrete peaks at approximately +11 and -11 nm in displacement, and 1.5 and 3.5 pN in force. Mean attached times for smooth muscle myosin were longer than for skeletal-muscle myosin. These results explain much of the difference in actin filament velocity between these myosins, and suggest that an increased duty cycle is responsible for the enhanced force-generating capacity of smooth over skeletal-muscle myosin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Myosin Va maneuvers through actin intersections and diffuses along microtubules

M. Yusuf Ali; Elena B. Krementsova; Guy G. Kennedy; Rachel Mahaffy; Thomas D. Pollard; Kathleen M. Trybus; David M. Warshaw

Certain types of intracellular organelle transport to the cell periphery are thought to involve long-range movement on microtubules by kinesin with subsequent handoff to vertebrate myosin Va (myoVa) for local delivery on actin tracks. This process may involve direct interactions between these two processive motors. Here we demonstrate using single molecule in vitro techniques that myoVa is flexible enough to effectively maneuver its way through actin filament intersections and Arp2/3 branches. In addition, myoVa surprisingly undergoes a one-dimensional diffusive search along microtubules, which may allow it to scan efficiently for kinesin and/or its cargo. These features of myoVa may help ensure efficient cargo delivery from the cell center to the periphery.


Molecular Cell | 2010

Collaborative Dynamic DNA Scanning by Nucleotide Excision Repair Proteins Investigated by Single- Molecule Imaging of Quantum-Dot-Labeled Proteins

Hong Wang; Guy G. Kennedy; David M. Warshaw; Bennett Van Houten

How DNA repair proteins sort through a genome for damage is one of the fundamental unanswered questions in this field. To address this problem, we uniquely labeled bacterial UvrA and UvrB with differently colored quantum dots and visualized how they interacted with DNA individually or together using oblique-angle fluorescence microscopy. UvrA was observed to utilize a three-dimensional search mechanism, binding transiently to the DNA for short periods (7 s). UvrA also was observed jumping from one DNA molecule to another over approximately 1 microm distances. Two UvrBs can bind to a UvrA dimer and collapse the search dimensionality of UvrA from three to one dimension by inducing a substantial number of UvrAB complexes to slide along the DNA. Three types of sliding motion were characterized: random diffusion, paused motion, and directed motion. This UvrB-induced change in mode of searching permits more rapid and efficient scanning of the genome for damage.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2003

A mutant heterodimeric myosin with one inactive head generates maximal displacement.

Arthur S. Rovner; Patricia M. Fagnant; Peteranne B. Joel; Guy G. Kennedy; Joseph B. Patlak; David M. Warshaw; Kathleen M. Trybus

Each of the heads of the motor protein myosin II is capable of supporting motion. A previous report showed that double-headed myosin generates twice the displacement of single-headed myosin (Tyska, M.J., D.E. Dupuis, W.H. Guilford, J.B. Patlak, G.S. Waller, K.M. Trybus, D.M. Warshaw, and S. Lowey. 1999. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 96:4402–4407). To determine the role of the second head, we expressed a smooth muscle heterodimeric heavy meromyosin (HMM) with one wild-type head, and the other locked in a weak actin-binding state by introducing a point mutation in switch II (E470A). Homodimeric E470A HMM did not support in vitro motility, and only slowly hydrolyzed MgATP. Optical trap measurements revealed that the heterodimer generated unitary displacements of 10.4 nm, strikingly similar to wild-type HMM (10.2 nm) and approximately twice that of single-headed subfragment-1 (4.4 nm). These data show that a double-headed molecule can achieve a working stroke of ∼10 nm with only one active head and an inactive weak-binding partner. We propose that the second head optimizes the orientation and/or stabilizes the structure of the motion-generating head, thereby resulting in maximum displacement.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Simultaneous Observation of Tail and Head Movements of Myosin V during Processive Motion

Hailong Lu; Guy G. Kennedy; David M. Warshaw; Kathleen M. Trybus

Processive stepping of myosin Va (myoV) has been tracked by monitoring either the tail position (center of mass) or the position of one or both heads. Here, we combine these two approaches by attaching a quantum dot to one of the motor domains and a bead to the tail. Using laser trapping and total internal reflection microscopy, the position of one head and the tail are observed simultaneously as myoV moves processively on an actin filament bundle against the resistive load of the laser trap. The head moves one step (73 ± 10 nm) for every two steps of the tail (35 ± 9 nm). One tail step occurs concurrently with quantum dot-labeled head movement, whereas the other occurs with movement of the unlabeled head, consistent with a hand-over-hand model. Load increases the probability of the motor taking a back step. The back step is triggered by the motor taking a shorter forward step (head step, 68 ± 11 nm; tail step, 32 ± 10 nm), likely one actin monomer short of its preferred binding site. During a back step, the motor reverses its hand-over-hand motion, with the leading head detaching and reattaching to one of multiple actin sites behind the trailing head. After a back step, the motor can correct its mistake and step processively forward at resistive loads <0.7 piconewton or stall or detach at higher loads. Back stepping may provide a mechanism to ensure efficient cargo delivery even when myoV encounters obstacles within the actin cytoskeletal meshwork or when other motors are attached to the same cargo.


Journal of Biophysics | 2015

Flexural Stiffness of Myosin Va Subdomains as Measured from Tethered Particle Motion

Arthur J. Michalek; Guy G. Kennedy; David M. Warshaw; M. Yusuf Ali

Myosin Va (MyoVa) is a processive molecular motor involved in intracellular cargo transport on the actin cytoskeleton. The motors processivity and ability to navigate actin intersections are believed to be governed by the stiffness of various parts of the motors structure. Specifically, changes in calcium may regulate motor processivity by altering the motors lever arm stiffness and thus its interhead communication. In order to measure the flexural stiffness of MyoVa subdomains, we use tethered particle microscopy, which relates the Brownian motion of fluorescent quantum dots, which are attached to various single- and double-headed MyoVa constructs bound to actin in rigor, to the motors flexural stiffness. Based on these measurements, the MyoVa lever arm and coiled-coil rod domain have comparable flexural stiffness (0.034 pN/nm). Upon addition of calcium, the lever arm stiffness is reduced 40% as a result of calmodulins potentially dissociating from the lever arm. In addition, the flexural stiffness of the full-length MyoVa construct is an order of magnitude less stiff than both a single lever arm and the coiled-coil rod. This suggests that the MyoVa lever arm-rod junction provides a flexible hinge that would allow the motor to maneuver cargo through the complex intracellular actin network.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 1999

A real-time Linux based laser trapping system

D.P. Gaffney; Guy G. Kennedy; David M. Warshaw

A laser trapping system for the study of actomyosin interactions at the single molecule level has been developed using Real-Time Linux (RT-Linux). The laser trap has been successfully employed to examine both displacements and near-isometric forces generated by a single myosin molecular motor interacting with an actin filament. In these assays an actin filament is strung between two beads that may be manipulated in solution by infrared laser traps. It is concluded that RT-Linux has proven to be capable of providing the required timing control as well as accommodating control of other components and data acquisition.


Biophysical Journal | 2005

Differential Labeling of Myosin V Heads with Quantum Dots Allows Direct Visualization of Hand-Over-Hand Processivity

David M. Warshaw; Guy G. Kennedy; Steven S. Work; Elena B. Krementsova; Samantha Beck; Kathleen M. Trybus


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Myosin V processivity: Multiple kinetic pathways for head-to-head coordination

Josh E. Baker; Elena B. Krementsova; Guy G. Kennedy; Amy Armstrong; Kathleen M. Trybus; David M. Warshaw


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

Myosin conformational states determined by single fluorophore polarization

David M. Warshaw; Eric Hayes; Donald P. Gaffney; Anne-Marie Lauzon; Junru Wu; Guy G. Kennedy; Kathleen M. Trybus; Susan Lowey; Christopher L. Berger

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Junru Wu

University of Vermont

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Sam Walcott

University of California

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