The highly processive motor, myosin V, has an extremely long neck containing six calmodulinbinding IQ motifs that allows it to take multiple 36 nm steps corresponding to the pseudo-repeat of actin. To further investigate how myosin V moves processively on actin filaments, we altered the length of the neck by adding or deleting IQ motifs in myosin constructs lacking the globular tail domain. These myosin V IQ mutants were fluorescently labeled by exchange of a single Cy3-labeled calmodulin into the neck region of one head. We measured the step-size of these individual IQ mutants with nanometer precision and subsecond resolution using FIONA. The step-size was proportional to neck length for constructs containing 2, 4, 6, and 8 IQ motifs, providing strong support for the swinging lever-arm model of myosin motility. In addition, the kinetics of stepping provided additional support for the hand-over-hand model whereby the two heads alternately assume the leading position. Interestingly, the 8IQ myosin V mutant gave a broad distribution of step-sizes with multiple peaks, suggesting that this mutant has many choices of binding sites on an actin filament. These data demonstrate that the step-size of myosin V is affected by the length of its neck and is not solely determined by the pseudo-repeat of the actin filament.Using biochemical assays, myosin V has been thoroughly characterized as a high duty ratio motor (1-3), spending a large fraction of its total enzymatic cycle time strongly bound to the actin filament. This kinetic property, along with the myosin V's unique long neck structure as a dimeric molecule, allows it to be highly processive. Therefore, the motor may undergo multiple enzymatic cycles while at least one head of the molecule is attached to the actin filament at anytime. This adaptation aids in the specific biological function of myosin V as a long-range vesicle transporter in cells (4, 5).The mouse myosin V heavy chain consists of an amino terminal motor domain joined to a long "neck" region containing six IQ motifs specific for calmodulin (CaM) 1 binding, followed by a carboxyl-terminal coiled-coil region and globular tail (6). The long neck region, which most likely functions as a lever-arm to amplify small nucleotidedependent structural changes in the motor domain, permits myosin V to take steps of an average distance of ∼36 nm, coinciding with the length of the half-pitch of an actin filament (2, 7). This step consists of a working stroke (defined as the distance myosin V translocates actin in a single movement of the lever-arm), followed by a diffusive search by the new lead head for a suitable binding site on actin. In studies with myosin II or myosin V mutants with different numbers of IQ motifs, the average working stroke taken by myosin in single interactions with actin was found to be proportional to neck length (8-13). In addition, one of these studies showed that the step-size of myosin V during processive runs in an optical trap was shorter for a construct containing four IQ motif...