info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy reveals the dynamics of kinesins interacting with organelles during microtubule-dependent transport in cells
Fecha
2019-10Registro en:
de Rossi, María Cecilia; González Bardeci, Nicolás Diego; Alvarez, Yanina Daniela; Mocksos, Esteban; Romero, Juan José; et al.; Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy reveals the dynamics of kinesins interacting with organelles during microtubule-dependent transport in cells; Elsevier Science; Biochimica et Biophysica Acta-Molecular Cell Research; 1867; 1; 10-2019; 1-38
0167-4889
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
de Rossi, María Cecilia
González Bardeci, Nicolás Diego
Alvarez, Yanina Daniela
Mocksos, Esteban
Romero, Juan José
Bruno, Luciana
Wetzler, Diana Elena
Levi, Valeria
Resumen
Microtubule-dependent motors usually work together to transport organelles through the crowded intracellular milieu. Thus, transport performance depends on how motors organize on the cargo. Unfortunately, the lack of methodologies capable of measuring this organization in cells determines that many aspects of the collective action of motors remain elusive. Here, we combined fluorescence fluctuations and single particle tracking techniques to address how kinesins organize on rod-like mitochondria moving along microtubules in cells. This methodology simultaneously provides mitochondria trajectories and EGFP-tagged kinesin-1 intensity at different mitochondrial positions with millisecond resolution. We show that kinesin exchange at the mitochondrion surface is within ~100 ms and depends on the organelle speed. During anterograde transport, the mitochondrial leading tip presents slower motor exchange in comparison to the rear tip. In contrast, retrograde mitochondria show similar exchange rates of kinesins at both tips. Numerical simulations provide theoretical support to these results and evidence that motors do not share the load equally during intracellular transport.