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Si-Kao Guo

Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publications -  17
Citations -  232

Si-Kao Guo is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Molecular motor & Kinesin. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 13 publications receiving 170 citations. Previous affiliations of Si-Kao Guo include Johns Hopkins University & Foshan University.

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A model of processive movement of dimeric kinesin

TL;DR: A model that can provide a consistent and quantitative explanation of the diverse experimental data is presented, with which to study the movement dynamics of the dimer under variations of solution viscosity, external load, ATP concentration, neck linker length, effect of necks linker docking, and effect of a large-size particle attached to one kinesin head.
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Processivity of dimeric kinesin-1 molecular motors.

TL;DR: The computational data quantitatively reproduced the puzzling experimental data on the dramatically asymmetric character of the run length with respect to the direction of external load acting on the coiled‐coil stalk, the enhancement of therun length by addition of phosphate, and the contrary features of theRun length for different types of kinesin‐1 with extensions of their neck linkers compared with those without extension of the neck linker.
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Investigating role of conformational changes of microtubule in regulating its binding affinity to kinesin by all-atom molecular dynamics simulation.

TL;DR: The all‐atom molecular dynamics simulations show that upon Pi release the ADP‐head temporarily has a much weaker affinity to the local microtubule‐tubulin than to other unperturbed tubulins.
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Force dependence of unbinding rate of kinesin motor during its processive movement on microtubule.

TL;DR: Kinesin is a biological molecular motor that can move continuously on microtubule until it unbinds and the mechanism of the slip-catch-slip bond was revealed.
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All-atom molecular dynamics simulations reveal how kinesin transits from one-head-bound to two-heads-bound state.

TL;DR: Using all‐atom molecular dynamics simulations, results reveal how the kinesin dimer retains 1HB state before ATP binding and how the dimer transits from 1HB to 2HB state after ATP binding.