Myosin V fluorescence imaging dataset for single-molecule localization and tracking

Myosin-5B is one of three members of the myosin-5 family of actin-based molecular motors fundamental in recycling endosome trafficking and collective actin network dynamics. Through single-molecule motility assays, we recently demonstrated that myosin-5B can proceed in 36-nm steps along actin filame...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lucia Gardini, Claudia Arbore, Francesco Saverio Pavone, Marco Capitanio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-08-01
Series:Data in Brief
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340919303269
Description
Summary:Myosin-5B is one of three members of the myosin-5 family of actin-based molecular motors fundamental in recycling endosome trafficking and collective actin network dynamics. Through single-molecule motility assays, we recently demonstrated that myosin-5B can proceed in 36-nm steps along actin filaments as single motor. By analyzing trajectories of single myosin-5B along actin filaments we showed that its velocity is dependent on ATP concentration, while its run length is independent on ATP concentration, as a landmark of processivity.Here, we share image stacks acquired under total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy and representative trajectories of single myosin-5B molecules labelled with Quantum Dots (QD-myo-5B) moving along actin filaments at different ATP concentrations (0.3–1000 μM). Localization of QD-myo-5B was performed with the PROOF software, which is freely available [1]. The data can be valuable for researchers interested in molecular motors motility, both from an experimental and modeling point of view, as well as to researchers developing single particle tracking algorithms. The data is related to the research article “Dissecting myosin-5B mechanosensitivity and calcium regulation at the single molecule level” Gardini et al., 2015. Keywords: Total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, Myosin, Single molecule biophysics
ISSN:2352-3409