Myosin V (myosin + v)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Myosin Va phosphorylated on Ser1650 is found in nuclear speckles and redistributes to nucleoli upon inhibition of transcription

CYTOSKELETON, Issue 6 2008
Maria Cristina S. Pranchevicius
Abstract Nuclear actin and nuclear myosins have been implicated in the regulation of gene expression in vertebrate cells. Myosin V is a class of actin-based motor proteins involved in cytoplasmic vesicle transport and anchorage, spindle-pole alignment and mRNA translocation. In this study, myosin-Va, phosphorylated on a conserved serine in the tail domain (phospho-ser1650 MVa), was localized to subnuclear compartments. A monoclonal antibody, 9E6, raised against a peptide corresponding to phosphoserine1650 and flanking regions of the murine myosin Va sequence, was immunoreactive to myosin Va heavy chain in cellular and nuclear extracts of HeLa cells, PC12 cells and B16-F10 melanocytes. Immunofluorescence microscopy with this antibody revealed discrete irregular spots within the nucleoplasm that colocalized with SC35, a splicing factor that earmarks nuclear speckles. Phospho-ser1650 MVa was not detected in other nuclear compartments, such as condensed chromatin, Cajal bodies, gems and perinucleolar caps. Although nucleoli also were not labeled by 9E6 under normal conditions, inhibition of transcription in HeLa cells by actinomycin D caused the redistribution of phospho-ser1650 MVa to nucleoli, as well as separating a fraction of phospho-ser1650 MVa from SC35 into near-neighboring particles. These observations indicate a novel role for myosin Va in nuclear compartmentalization and offer a new lead towards the understanding of actomyosin-based gene regulation. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 2008. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Native nonmuscle myosin II stability and light chain binding in Drosophila melanogaster

CYTOSKELETON, Issue 10 2006
Josef D. Franke
Abstract Native nonmuscle myosin IIs play essential roles in cellular and developmental processes throughout phylogeny. Individual motor molecules consist of a heterohexameric complex of three polypeptides which, when properly assembled, are capable of force generation. Here, we more completely characterize the properties, relationships and associations that each subunit has with one another in Drosophila melanogaster. All three native nonmuscle myosin II polypeptide subunits are expressed in close to constant stoichiometry to each other throughout development. We find that the stability of two subunits, the heavy chain and the regulatory light chain, depend on one another whereas the stability of the third subunit, the essential light chain, does not depend on either the heavy chain or regulatory light chain. We demonstrate that heavy chain aggregates, which form when regulatory light chain is lacking, associate with the essential light chain in vivo,thus showing that regulatory light chain association is required for heavy chain solubility. By immunodepletion we find that the majority of both light chains are associated with the nonmuscle myosin II heavy chain but pools of free light chain and/or light chain bound to other proteins are present. We identify four myosins (myosin II, myosin V, myosin VI and myosin VIIA) and a microtubule-associated protein (asp/Abnormal spindle) as binding partners for the essential light chain (but not the regulatory light chain) through mass spectrometry and co-precipitation. Using an in silico approach we identify six previously uncharacterized genes that contain IQ-motifs and may be essential light chain binding partners. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 2006. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Myosins II and V in chromaffin cells: myosin V is a chromaffin vesicle molecular motor involved in secretion

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 2 2003
Sergio D. Rosé
Abstract The presence of myosin II and V in chromaffin cells and their subcellular distribution is described. Myosin II and V distribution in sucrose density gradients showed only a strong correlation between the distribution of myosin V and secretory vesicle markers. Confocal microscopy images demonstrated colocalization of myosin V with dopamine ,-hydroxylase, a chromaffin vesicle marker, whereas myosin II was present mainly in the cell cortex. Cell depolarization induced, in a Ca2+ and time-dependent manner, the dissociation of myosin V from chromaffin vesicles suggesting that this association was not permanent but determined by secretory cycle requirements. Myosin II was also found in the crude granule fraction, however, its distribution was not affected by cell depolarization. Myosin V head antibodies were able to inhibit secretion whereas myosin II antibodies had no inhibitory effect. The pattern of inhibition indicated that these treatments interfered with the transport of vesicles from the reserve to the release-ready compartment, suggesting the involvement of myosin V and not myosin II in this transport process. The results described here suggest that myosin V is a molecular motor involved in chromaffin vesicle secretion. However, these results do not discard an indirect role for myosin II in secretion through its interaction with F-actin networks. [source]