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Dive into the research topics where Hernando Sosa is active.

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Featured researches published by Hernando Sosa.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2001

ADP-induced rocking of the kinesin motor domain revealed by single-molecule fluorescence polarization microscopy

Hernando Sosa; Erwin J.G. Peterman; W. E. Moerner; Lawrence S.B. Goldstein

Kinesin is an ATP-driven molecular motor protein that moves processively along microtubules. Despite considerable research, the detailed mechanism of kinesin motion remains elusive. We applied an enhanced suite of single- and multiple-molecule fluorescence polarization microscopy assays to report the orientation and mobility of kinesin molecules bound to microtubules as a function of nucleotide state. In the presence of analogs of ATP, ADP-Pi or in the absence of nucleotide, the kinesin head maintains a rigid orientation. In the presence of ADP, the motor domain of kinesin, still bound to the microtubule, adopts a previously undescribed, highly mobile state. This state may be general to the chemomechanical cycle of motor proteins; in the case of kinesin, the transition from a highly mobile to a rigid state after ADP release may contribute to the generation of the 8 nm step.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Configuration of the two kinesin motor domains during ATP hydrolysis

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 Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006

Nucleotide binding and hydrolysis induces a disorder-order transition in the kinesin neck-linker region

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

Kinesin-13s form rings around microtubules

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

A mobile kinesin-head intermediate during the ATP-waiting state

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

Structural Model for Tubulin Recognition and Deformation by Kinesin-13 Microtubule Depolymerases

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 Host & Microbe | 2008

A Stable Prefusion Intermediate of the Alphavirus Fusion Protein Reveals Critical Features of Class II Membrane Fusion

Claudia Sánchez-San Martín; Hernando Sosa; Margaret Kielian

Alphaviruses infect cells via a low-pH-triggered membrane fusion reaction mediated by the class II virus fusion protein E1, an elongated molecule with three extramembrane domains (DI-III). E1 drives fusion by inserting its fusion peptide loop into the target membrane and refolding to a hairpin-like trimer in which DIII moves toward the target membrane and packs against the central trimer. Three-dimensional structures provide static pictures of prefusion and postfusion E1 but do not explain this transition. Using truncated forms of E1, we reconstituted a low-pH-dependent intermediate composed of trimers of DI/II. Unexpectedly, DI/II trimers were stable in the absence of DIII. Once formed at a low pH, DI/II trimers efficiently and specifically bound recombinant DIII through a pH-independent reaction. Even in the absence of DIII, DI/II trimers interacted to form hexagonal lattices and to cause membrane deformation and tubulation. These studies identify a prefusion intermediate in class II membrane fusion.


Structure | 2008

Structure of the Kinesin13-Microtubule Ring Complex

Dongyan Tan; William J. Rice; Hernando Sosa

To investigate the mechanism of kinesin13-induced microtubule depolymerization, we have calculated a three-dimensional (3D) map of the kinesin13-microtubule ring complex, using cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and image analysis. An atomic model of the complex was produced by docking the crystal structures of tubulin and a kinesin13 motor domain (MD) into the 3D map. The model reveals a snapshot of the depolymerization mechanism by providing a 3D view of the complex formed between the kinesin13 MD and a curved tubulin protofilament (pf). It suggests that contacts mediated by kinesin13 class-specific residues in the putative microtubule-binding site stabilize intra-dimer tubulin curvature. In addition, a tubulin-binding site on the kinesin13 MD was identified. Mutations at this class-conserved site selectively disrupt the formation of microtubule-associated ring complexes.


Cell Cycle | 2012

Human Fidgetin is a microtubule severing the enzyme and minus-end depolymerase that regulates mitosis

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

Motor domain phosphorylation and regulation of the Drosophila kinesin 13, KLP10A

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.

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Ana B. Asenjo

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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David J. Sharp

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Matthieu P.M.H. Benoit

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Chandrima Chatterjee

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Gary J. Gerfen

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Vania DePaoli

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Vania M. De Paoli

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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