MOLECULAR MOTORS - SCI & TECH

News: Bengaluru scientists help find new kind of molecular motor

 

What's in the news?

       An international team of researchers, Including from the National Centre for Biological Sciences (NCBS), Bengaluru, has reported a new kind of molecular motor.

 

Molecular Motors:

       Molecular motors are a class of proteins that drive intracellular trafficking by converting chemical energy to mechanical work along cytoskeletal filaments. They are directed movement along cytoskeletal filaments.

       Eukaryotic cells contain motors that help to transport organelles to their correct cellular locations and to establish and alter cellular morphology during cell locomotion and division.

       They differ in the type of filament they bind to (either actin or microtubules), the direction in which they move along the filament, and the "cargo" they carry.

       Many motor proteins carry membrane-enclosed organelles, such as mitochondria, Golgi stacks, or secretory vesicles (e.g. hormones or neurotransmitters), to their appropriate locations in the cell.

       Other motor proteins cause cytoskeletal filaments to slide against each other, generating the force that drives such phenomena as muscle contraction, ciliary beating. and cell division (mitosis).

       Motor proteins use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to move along microtubules or actin filaments.

       They mediate the sliding of filaments relative to one another and the transport of membrane-enclosed organelles along filament tracks.

 

Significance of Study:

       The discovery of the molecular motor could have potential applications in biology and medicine.

       The study provides a general mechanism that is applicable to many mechanochemical proteins or assemblies that harness chemical energy for mechanical work in cells.