Osmomechanics of the Propionigenium modestum Fo Motor
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes
- Vol. 32 (5) , 449-458
- https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1005608823087
Abstract
In Propionigenium modestum, ATP is manufactured from ADP and phosphate by the enzyme ATP synthase using the free energy of an electrochemical gradient of Na+ ions. The P. modestum ATP synthase is a clear member of the family of F-type ATP synthases and the only major distinction is an extension of the coupling ion specificity to H+, Li+, or Na+, depending on the conditions. The use of Na+ as a coupling ion offers unique experimental options to decipher the ion-translocation mechanism and the osmotic and mechanical behavior of the enzyme. The single a subunit and the oligomer of c subunits are part of the stator and rotor, respectively, and operate together in the ion-translocation mechanism. During ATP synthesis, Na+ diffuses from the periplasm through the a subunit channel onto the Na+ binding site on a c subunit. From there it dissociates into the cytoplasm after the site has rotated out of the interface with subunit a. In the absence of a membrane potential, the rotor performs Brownian motions into either direction and Na+ ions are exchanged between the two compartments separated by the membrane. Upon applying voltage, however, the direction of Na+ flux and of rotation is biased by the potential. The motor generates torque to drive the rotation of the γ subunit, thereby releasing tightly bound ATP from catalytic sites in F1. Hence, the membrane potential plays a pivotal role in the torque-generating mechanism. This is corroborated by the fact that for ATP synthesis, at physiological rates, the membrane potential is indispensable. We propose a catalytic mechanism for torque generation by the Fo motor that is in accord with all experimental data and is in quantitative agreement with the requirement for ATP synthesis.Keywords
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