AbstractF1Fo ATP synthases generate ATP by a rotary catalytic mechanism in which H+ transport is coupled to rotation of a ring of c subunits within the transmembrane sector of the enzyme. Protons bind to and then are released from the aspartyl-61 residue of subunit c at the center of the membrane. Proton access channels to and from aspartyl-61 are thought to form in subunit a of the Fo sector. Here, we summarize new information on the structural organization of subunit a and the mapping of aqueous accessible residues in the fourth and fifth transmembrane helices (TMHs). Cysteine substituted residues, lying on opposite faces of aTMH-4, preferentially react with either N-ethyl-maleimide (NEM) or Ag+. We propose that aTMH-4 rotates to alternat...
The crystal structure of the c-ring from the proton-coupled F1Fo ATP synthase from Spirulina platens...
The ATP synthase can be imagined as a reversible H(+)-translocating channel embedded in the membrane...
The ATP synthase can be imagined as a reversible H(+)-translocating channel embedded in the membrane...
AbstractF1F0 ATP synthases generate ATP by a rotary catalytic mechanism in which H+ transport is cou...
AbstractH+-transporting, F1Fo-type ATP synthases utilize a transmembrane H+ potential to drive ATP f...
AbstractH+-transporting F1Fo ATP synthase catalyzes the synthesis of ATP via coupled rotary motors w...
AbstractH+-transporting, F1Fo-type ATP synthases utilize a transmembrane H+ potential to drive ATP f...
AbstractF1F0 ATP synthases are known to synthesize ATP by rotary catalysis in the F1 sector of the e...
AbstractH+-transporting F1Fo ATP synthase catalyzes the synthesis of ATP via coupled rotary motors w...
AbstractF1F0 ATP synthases are known to synthesize ATP by rotary catalysis in the F1 sector of the e...
ABSTRACT F1Fo-ATP synthase is a ubiquitous membrane protein complex that efficiently converts a cell...
AbstractF1Fo-ATP synthase is a ubiquitous membrane protein complex that efficiently converts a cell'...
AbstractIn recent years, structural information on the F1 sector of the ATP synthase has provided an...
AbstractF1Fo-ATP synthase is a ubiquitous membrane protein complex that efficiently converts a cell'...
The microscopic mechanism of coupled c-ring rotation and ion translocation in F(1)F(o)-ATP synthases...
The crystal structure of the c-ring from the proton-coupled F1Fo ATP synthase from Spirulina platens...
The ATP synthase can be imagined as a reversible H(+)-translocating channel embedded in the membrane...
The ATP synthase can be imagined as a reversible H(+)-translocating channel embedded in the membrane...
AbstractF1F0 ATP synthases generate ATP by a rotary catalytic mechanism in which H+ transport is cou...
AbstractH+-transporting, F1Fo-type ATP synthases utilize a transmembrane H+ potential to drive ATP f...
AbstractH+-transporting F1Fo ATP synthase catalyzes the synthesis of ATP via coupled rotary motors w...
AbstractH+-transporting, F1Fo-type ATP synthases utilize a transmembrane H+ potential to drive ATP f...
AbstractF1F0 ATP synthases are known to synthesize ATP by rotary catalysis in the F1 sector of the e...
AbstractH+-transporting F1Fo ATP synthase catalyzes the synthesis of ATP via coupled rotary motors w...
AbstractF1F0 ATP synthases are known to synthesize ATP by rotary catalysis in the F1 sector of the e...
ABSTRACT F1Fo-ATP synthase is a ubiquitous membrane protein complex that efficiently converts a cell...
AbstractF1Fo-ATP synthase is a ubiquitous membrane protein complex that efficiently converts a cell'...
AbstractIn recent years, structural information on the F1 sector of the ATP synthase has provided an...
AbstractF1Fo-ATP synthase is a ubiquitous membrane protein complex that efficiently converts a cell'...
The microscopic mechanism of coupled c-ring rotation and ion translocation in F(1)F(o)-ATP synthases...
The crystal structure of the c-ring from the proton-coupled F1Fo ATP synthase from Spirulina platens...
The ATP synthase can be imagined as a reversible H(+)-translocating channel embedded in the membrane...
The ATP synthase can be imagined as a reversible H(+)-translocating channel embedded in the membrane...