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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Morfini GA, You YM, Pollema SL, Kaminska A, Liu K, Yoshioka K, Björkblom B, Coffey ET, Bagnato C, Han D, Huang CF, Banker G, Pigino G, Brady ST. Pathogenic huntingtin inhibits fast axonal transport by activating JNK3 and phosphorylating kinesin. Nat Neurosci. 2009 Jul;12(7):864-71. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Huntingtin—Putting the Boot on Axonal Transport

Comment by:  Virgil Muresan, Zoia Muresan
Submitted 14 July 2009  |  Permalink Posted 14 July 2009
  I recommend this paper

We would like to comment on the interesting results of the recent study by Morfini et al. (1). Kinesin-1, a major microtubule motor that transports cargo in the plus-end direction of microtubules, is a heterotetramer consisting of two microtubule-binding, motor polypeptides (the heavy chains; KHCs) and two cargo-binding polypeptides (the light chains; KLCs). Being a soluble, cytoplasmic protein, kinesin-1 needs to bind the cargo in order to transport it. Therefore, recruitment of kinesin-1 to the cargo vesicle, and its release from it, are important regulatory steps of axonal transport. About 10 years ago, Scott Brady’s laboratory identified the first mechanism leading to the release of kinesin-1 from vesicles. According to this model, kinesin-1 is released through the action of the chaperone HSC70, and is nucleotide-dependent and NEM-sensitive (2). One year later, work from Larry Goldstein’s laboratory suggested that the premature release of kinesin-1 from cargo vesicles in neurons could impair fast axonal transport and lead to neuronal pathology and disease (3). Although the...  Read more
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