Life without double-headed non-muscle myosin II motor proteins

被引:34
作者
Betapudi, Venkaiah [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Cleveland Clin, Dept Cellular & Mol Med, Lerner Res Inst, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA
[2] Case Western Reserve Univ, Dept Physiol & Biophys, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA
关键词
myosin II; motor proteins; molecular machines; cell migration; cytokinesis; cancer; pathogenesis; microparticles;
D O I
10.3389/fchem.2014.00045
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Non-muscle myosin II motor proteins (myosin IIA, myosin IIB, and myosin IIC) belong to a class of molecular motor proteins that are known to transduce cellular free-energy into biological work more efficiently than man-made combustion engines. Nature has given a single myosin II motor protein for lower eukaryotes and multiple for mammals but none for plants in order to provide impetus for their life. These specialized nanomachines drive cellular activities necessary for embryogenesis, organogenesis, and immunity. However, these multifunctional myosin II motor proteins are believed to go awry due to unknown reasons and contribute for the onset and progression of many autosomal-dominant disorders, cataract, deafness, infertility, cancer, kidney, neuronal, and inflammatory diseases. Many pathogens like HIV, Dengue, hepatitis C, and Lymphoma viruses as well as Salmonella and Mycobacteria are now known to take hostage of these dedicated myosin II motor proteins for their efficient pathogenesis. Even after four decades since their discovery, we still have a limited knowledge of how these motor proteins drive cell migration and cytokinesis. We need to enrich our current knowledge on these fundamental cellular processes and develop novel therapeutic strategies to fix mutated myosin II motor proteins in pathological conditions. This is the time to think how to relieve the hijacked myosins from pathogens in order to provide a renewed impetus for patients' life. Understanding how to steer these molecular motors in proliferating and differentiating stem cells will improve stem cell based-therapeutics development. Given the plethora of cellular activities non-muscle myosin motor proteins are involved in, their importance is apparent for human life.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 180 条
[31]  
COLLINS JH, 1980, J BIOL CHEM, V255, P8011
[32]   IDENTIFICATION OF THE SERINE RESIDUE PHOSPHORYLATED BY PROTEIN-KINASE-C IN VERTEBRATE NONMUSCLE MYOSIN HEAVY-CHAINS [J].
CONTI, MA ;
SELLERS, JR ;
ADELSTEIN, RS ;
ELZINGA, M .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1991, 30 (04) :966-970
[33]   Defects in cell adhesion and the visceral endoderm following ablation of nonmuscle myosin heavy chain II-A in mice [J].
Conti, MA ;
Even-Ram, S ;
Liu, CY ;
Yamada, KM ;
Adelstein, RS .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2004, 279 (40) :41263-41266
[34]   Nonmuscle myosin II moves in new directions [J].
Conti, Mary Anne ;
Adelstein, Robert S. .
JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE, 2008, 121 (01) :11-18
[35]   The juvenile Batten disease protein, CLN3, and its role in regulating anterograde and retrograde post-Golgi trafficking [J].
Cotman, Susan L. ;
Staropoli, John F. .
CLINICAL LIPIDOLOGY, 2012, 7 (01) :79-91
[36]   LIGHT-CHAIN PHOSPHORYLATION CONTROLS THE CONFORMATION OF VERTEBRATE NON-MUSCLE AND SMOOTH-MUSCLE MYOSIN MOLECULES [J].
CRAIG, R ;
SMITH, R ;
KENDRICKJONES, J .
NATURE, 1983, 302 (5907) :436-439
[37]   ACTIVE-SITE TRAPPING OF NUCLEOTIDE BY SMOOTH AND NON-MUSCLE MYOSINS [J].
CROSS, RA ;
JACKSON, AP ;
CITI, S ;
KENDRICKJONES, J ;
BAGSHAW, CR .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1988, 203 (01) :173-181
[38]   ATP-LINKED MONOMER POLYMER EQUILIBRIUM OF SMOOTH-MUSCLE MYOSIN - THE FREE FOLDED MONOMER TRAPS ADP.PI [J].
CROSS, RA ;
CROSS, KE ;
SOBIESZEK, A .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1986, 5 (10) :2637-2641
[39]   The tumor suppressor Lgl1 regulates NMII-A cellular distribution and focal adhesion morphology to optimize cell migration [J].
Dahan, Inbal ;
Yearim, Ahuv ;
Touboul, Yarin ;
Ravid, Shoshana .
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL, 2012, 23 (04) :591-601
[40]   Signaling pathways regulating Dictyostelium myosin II [J].
De la Roche, MA ;
Smith, JL ;
Betapudi, V ;
Egelhoff, TT ;
Côté, GP .
JOURNAL OF MUSCLE RESEARCH AND CELL MOTILITY, 2002, 23 (7-8) :703-718