Protein Structure and Folding
Allosteric Drug Discrimination Is Coupled to Mechanochemical Changes in the Kinesin-5 Motor Core*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.092072Get rights and content
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Essential in mitosis, the human Kinesin-5 protein is a target for >80 classes of allosteric compounds that bind to a surface-exposed site formed by the L5 loop. Not established is why there are differing efficacies in drug inhibition. Here we compare the ligand-bound states of two L5-directed inhibitors against 15 Kinesin-5 mutants by ATPase assays and IR spectroscopy. Biochemical kinetics uncovers functional differences between individual residues at the N or C termini of the L5 loop. Infrared evaluation of solution structures and multivariate analysis of the vibrational spectra reveal that mutation and/or ligand binding not only can remodel the allosteric binding surface but also can transmit long range effects. Changes in L5-localized 310 helix and disordered content, regardless of substitution or drug potency, are experimentally detected. Principal component analysis couples these local structural events to two types of rearrangements in β-sheet hydrogen bonding. These transformations in β-sheet contacts are correlated with inhibitory drug response and are corroborated by wild type Kinesin-5 crystal structures. Despite considerable evolutionary divergence, our data directly support a theorized conserved element for long distance mechanochemical coupling in kinesin, myosin, and F1-ATPase. These findings also suggest that these relatively rapid IR approaches can provide structural biomarkers for clinical determination of drug sensitivity and drug efficacy in nucleotide triphosphatases.

Allosteric Regulation
ATPases
Drug Action
Drug Resistance
Fourier Transform IR (FTIR)
Kinesin
Molecular Motors
Protein Structure
Multivariate Data Analysis

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The atomic coordinates and structure factors (code 3KEN) have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank, Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ (http://www.rcsb.org/).

*

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grant GM066328 (to E. J. W.). This work was also supported by grants from the Louisiana Board of Regents (to S. K. and to D. K. W.), the OSER/Carilion Biomedical Institute (to E. J. W. and S. K.), ASPIRES (to S. K., R. A. W., and E. J. W.), and the National Science Foundation (to R. A. W.).

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental Movie S1 and Figs. S1–S3.