kinesiini
Kinesiini, known in English as kinesins, are a family of microtubule-based motor proteins that transport cargo inside eukaryotic cells. They convert chemical energy from ATP hydrolysis into mechanical work, enabling directed movement along microtubules. Most kinesins are dimeric, with two motor domains that bind to microtubules, a coiled-coil stalk that dimerizes the protein, and a tail region that attaches to cargo via adaptor proteins. In the majority of kinesins, movement is toward the microtubule plus end, supporting anterograde transport.
Kinesins generate motion through a chemomechanical cycle in which ATP binding, hydrolysis, and product release regulate
Kinesins perform essential cellular functions, including transport of vesicles, mitochondria, and mRNA, and they support the
In humans, kinesins comprise a large superfamily (KIF genes) with more than 40 members encoded. Dysfunctions