Takeshi Haraguchi, Masanori Tamanaha, Kano Suzuki, Kohei Yoshimura, Takuma Imi, Motoki Tominaga, Hidetoshi Sakayama, Tomoaki Nishiyama, Takeshi Murata, Kohji Ito
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 119(8) e2120962119-e2120962119 2022年2月22日 査読有り最終著者責任著者
Cytoplasmic streaming with extremely high velocity (∼70 μm s−1) occurs in cells of the characean algae (<italic>Chara</italic>). Because cytoplasmic streaming is caused by myosin XI, it has been suggested that a myosin XI with a velocity of 70 μm s−1, the fastest myosin measured so far, exists in <italic>Chara</italic> cells. However, the velocity of the previously cloned <italic>Chara corallina</italic> myosin XI (<italic>Cc</italic>XI) was about 20 μm s−1, one-third of the cytoplasmic streaming velocity in <italic>Chara</italic>. Recently, the genome sequence of <italic>Chara braunii</italic> has been published, revealing that this alga has four myosin XI genes. We cloned these four myosin XI (<italic>Cb</italic>XI-1, 2, 3, and 4) and measured their velocities. While the velocities of <italic>Cb</italic>XI-3 and <italic>Cb</italic>XI-4 motor domains (MDs) were similar to that of <italic>Cc</italic>XI MD, the velocities of <italic>Cb</italic>XI-1 and <italic>Cb</italic>XI-2 MDs were 3.2 times and 2.8 times faster than that of <italic>Cc</italic>XI MD, respectively. The velocity of chimeric <italic>Cb</italic>XI-1, a functional, full-length <italic>Cb</italic>XI-1 construct, was 60 μm s−1. These results suggest that <italic>Cb</italic>XI-1 and <italic>Cb</italic>XI-2 would be the main contributors to cytoplasmic streaming in <italic>Chara</italic> cells and show that these myosins are ultrafast myosins with a velocity 10 times faster than fast skeletal muscle myosins in animals. We also report an atomic structure (2.8-Å resolution) of myosin XI using X-ray crystallography. Based on this crystal structure and the recently published cryo-electron microscopy structure of acto-myosin XI at low resolution (4.3-Å), it appears that the actin-binding region contributes to the fast movement of <italic>Chara</italic> myosin XI. Mutation experiments of actin-binding surface loops support this hypothesis.