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The plasma membrane H+ -ATPase, a simple polypeptide with a long history.

Michael Broberg PalmgrenPierre Morsomme
Published in: Yeast (Chichester, England) (2018)
The plasma membrane H+ -ATPase of fungi and plants is a single polypeptide of fewer than 1,000 residues that extrudes protons from the cell against a large electric and concentration gradient. The minimalist structure of this nanomachine is in stark contrast to that of the large multi-subunit FO F1 ATPase of mitochondria, which is also a proton pump, but under physiological conditions runs in the reverse direction to act as an ATP synthase. The plasma membrane H+ -ATPase is a P-type ATPase, defined by having an obligatory phosphorylated reaction cycle intermediate, like cation pumps of animal membranes, and thus, this pump has a completely different mechanism to that of FO F1 ATPases, which operates by rotary catalysis. The work that led to these insights in plasma membrane H+ -ATPases of fungi and plants has a long history, which is briefly summarized in this review.
Keyphrases
  • endoplasmic reticulum
  • magnetic resonance
  • cell death
  • cell therapy
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • reactive oxygen species
  • electron transfer
  • contrast enhanced