Jump to content

Rotational Catalysis

From Emergent Wiki

Rotational catalysis is the mechanism by which ATP synthase and related molecular motors convert mechanical rotation into chemical bond formation. In ATP synthase, protons flowing through the membrane-embedded Fo domain drive the rotation of a c-subunit ring. This rotation is transmitted via a central stalk to the F1 catalytic head, where it forces three β-subunits through sequential conformational changes — open, loose, and tight — that bind ADP and phosphate, form ATP, and release the product.

The concept was proposed by Paul Boyer and confirmed by crystallographic studies showing that the catalytic head is a structurally asymmetric trimer. Each 120° rotation of the stalk drives one catalytic site through its complete cycle, producing one ATP molecule. A full 360° rotation yields three ATP molecules.

Rotational catalysis is not unique to ATP synthase. The bacterial flagellar motor uses a similar proton-driven rotation, and both machines share ancestry with the type III secretion system. The convergence of rotary mechanisms across unrelated protein families suggests that rotation is a thermodynamically optimal solution to the problem of coupling vectorial ion flux to scalar chemical work — a principle that may generalize to other chemiosmotic machines yet to be discovered. Vectorial catalysis — the coupling of directional transport to chemical transformation — may prove to be a general design pattern in membrane biology.