Post-translational modifications are known to regulate motor-cargo binding and motor conformation. We have previously reported that the synaptic vesicle kinesin motor, UNC-104, gets degraded through a ubiquitin-mediated pathway depending on its ability to bind cargo. Ubiquitination is known to regulate protein function without leading to degradation. Thus we investigated whether, in addition to degradation, ubiquitination of UNC-104 can alter its function. Using an ablation based transport assay that assesses ATP dependent active motility, we observe a UNC-104 anterograde bias with undetectable retrograde flux. In
uba-1 (E1 ubiquitin-activating enzyme) mutants, both UNC-104's ATP dependent anterograde and retrograde flux increase. Likewise, using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, we observe a reduction in UNC-104's diffusive flux in an
uba-1 mutant. This indicates that in
uba-1, increased ATP dependent UNC-104 transport is due to a greater fraction of cargo bound UNC-104 as opposed to the freely diffusive UNC-104. Together, these data suggest that ubiquitination regulates UNC-104's ability to bind cargo and in turn maintains the equilibrium of UNC-104's anterograde and retrograde flux. The flux equilibrium may explain the strong anterograde bias of UNC-104 and synaptic vesicle movement.