“…Alternatively, given that mutations in the tail and motor domain of KIF22 both disrupt chromosome segregation, the tail and motor domain may interact to inactivate the motor. Head-tail autoinhibition is a known regulatory mechanism of other members of the kinesin superfamily (Blasius et al, 2021; Coy, Hancock, Wagenbach, & Howard, 1999; Espeut et al, 2008; Friedman & Vale, 1999; Hammond, Blasius, Soppina, Cai, & Verhey, 2010; Hammond et al, 2009; Imanishi, Endres, Gennerich, & Vale, 2006; Ren et al, 2018; Verhey & Hammond, 2009; Verhey et al, 1998), and disruption of autoinhibition can be a mechanism of disease pathogenesis (Asselin et al, 2020; Bianchi et al, 2016; Blasius et al, 2021; Cheng et al, 2014; Pant et al, 2022; van der Vaart et al, 2013). Mutations in either the tail or motor domain could disrupt this interaction, preventing KIF22 inactivation in anaphase.…”