Protein Domain : IPR000454

Type:  Family Name:  ATPase, F0 complex, subunit C
Description:  Transmembrane ATPases are membrane-bound enzyme complexes/ion transporters that use ATP hydrolysis to drive the transport of protons across a membrane. Some transmembrane ATPases also work in reverse, harnessing the energy from a proton gradient, using the flux of ions across the membrane via the ATPase proton channel to drive the synthesis of ATP. There are several different types of transmembrane ATPases, which can differ in function (ATP hydrolysis and/or synthesis), structure (e.g., F-, V- and A-ATPases, which contain rotary motors) and in the type of ions they transport [, ]. The different types include:F-ATPases (F1F0-ATPases), which are found in mitochondria, chloroplasts and bacterial plasma membranes where they are the prime producers of ATP, using the proton gradient generated by oxidative phosphorylation (mitochondria) or photosynthesis (chloroplasts).V-ATPases (V1V0-ATPases), which are primarily found in eukaryotic and they function as proton pumps that acidify intracellular compartments and, in some cases, transport protons across the plasma membrane []. They are also found in bacteria [].A-ATPases (A1A0-ATPases), which are found in Archaea and function like F-ATPases, though with respect to their structure and some inhibitor responses, A-ATPases are more closely related to the V-ATPases [, ].P-ATPases (E1E2-ATPases), which are found in bacteria and in eukaryotic plasma membranes and organelles, and function to transport a variety of different ions across membranes.E-ATPases, which are cell-surface enzymes that hydrolyse a range of NTPs, including extracellular ATP.F-ATPases (also known as F1F0-ATPase, or H(+)-transporting two-sector ATPase) () are composed of two linked complexes: the F1 ATPase complex is the catalytic core and is composed of 5 subunits (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon), while the F0 ATPase complex is the membrane-embedded proton channel that is composed of at least 3 subunits (A-C), nine in mitochondria (A-G, F6, F8). Both the F1 and F0 complexes are rotary motors that are coupled back-to-back. In the F1 complex, the central gamma subunit forms the rotor inside the cylinder made of the alpha(3)beta(3) subunits, while in the F0 complex, the ring-shaped C subunits forms the rotor. The two rotors rotate in opposite directions, but the F0 rotor is usually stronger, using the force from the proton gradient to push the F1 rotor in reverse in order to drive ATP synthesis []. These ATPases can also work in reverse in bacteria, hydrolysing ATP to create a proton gradient.This entry represents subunit C (also called subunit 9, or proteolipid) found in the F0 complex of F-ATPases. Ten C subunits form an oligomeric ring that makes up the F0 rotor. The flux of protons through the ATPase channel drives the rotation of the C subunit ring, which in turn is coupled to the rotation of the F1 complex gamma subunit rotor due to the permanent binding between the gamma and epsilon subunits of F1 and the C subunit ring of F0. The sequential protonation and deprotonation of Asp61 of subunit C is coupled to the stepwise movement of the rotor []. Short Name:  ATPase_F0-cplx_csu

1 Child Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR005953 Family ATPase, F0 complex, subunit C, bacterial/chloroplast

1 Contains

DB identifier Type Name
IPR020537 Binding_site ATPase, F0 complex, subunit C, DCCD-binding site

2 Cross Referencess

Identifier
PR00124
G3DSA:1.20.20.10

0 Found In

3 GO Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0015078 IPR000454
GO:0015986 IPR000454
GO:0045263 IPR000454

3 Ontology Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0015078 IPR000454
GO:0015986 IPR000454
GO:0045263 IPR000454

0 Parent Features

3256 Proteins

DB identifier UniProt Accession Secondary Identifier Organism Name Length
137813 C7B2E7 PAC:15422893 Selaginella moellendorffii 81  
evm.model.supercontig_10.246 PAC:16404611 Carica papaya 81  
evm.model.supercontig_170.23 PAC:16410842 Carica papaya 129  
evm.model.supercontig_19.100 PAC:16411829 Carica papaya 436  
30748.m000027 B9TKH1 PAC:16824590 Ricinus communis 178  
51845.m000009 PAC:16828458 Ricinus communis 60  
58083.m000075 B9T953 PAC:16829109 Ricinus communis 101  
Cucsa.316840.1 PAC:16977126 Cucumis sativus 115  
Cucsa.126980.1 A0A0A0LUN6 PAC:16962014 Cucumis sativus 470  
Cucsa.126980.2 PAC:16962015 Cucumis sativus 353  
Cucsa.245320.1 PAC:16971342 Cucumis sativus 57  
orange1.1g039011m A0A067GI05 PAC:18112725 Citrus sinensis 404  
orange1.1g038336m A0A067FHL6 PAC:18128436 Citrus sinensis 251  
AT5G02380.1 Q38805 PAC:19671369 Arabidopsis thaliana 77  
ATCG00140.1 P56760 PAC:19638009 Arabidopsis thaliana 81  
ATMG01080.1 Q304C3 PAC:19643650 Arabidopsis thaliana 85  
ATMG00040.1 P93278 PAC:19643613 Arabidopsis thaliana 315  
AT2G07671.1 Q304C3 PAC:19641459 Arabidopsis thaliana 85  
Thhalv10023008m V4MEP3 PAC:20202474 Eutrema salsugineum 85  
Thhalv10004537m V4MKH5 PAC:20199895 Eutrema salsugineum 337  
Ciclev10009153m V4UNV7 PAC:20792794 Citrus clementina 275  
Ciclev10018254m V4U4T8 PAC:20817292 Citrus clementina 417  
Potri.015G124900.1 A0A2K1XM30 PAC:27019118 Populus trichocarpa 192  
Potri.002G114300.1 A0A2K2BHC8 PAC:27021589 Populus trichocarpa 455  
Potri.017G074500.1 A0A2K1X4K6 PAC:26985272 Populus trichocarpa 81  
Potri.005G154900.1 PAC:27031750 Populus trichocarpa 81  
Potri.019G028500.1 A0A2K1WNK9 PAC:27026521 Populus trichocarpa 81  
Potri.013G137700.1 PAC:26994352 Populus trichocarpa 81  
Potri.013G142700.1 A0A2K1Y5K8 PAC:26994141 Populus trichocarpa 92  
Gorai.001G163400.1 A0A0D2LZE3 PAC:26822686 Gossypium raimondii 679  

8 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            11309608
            15473999
            15078220
            9741106
            20450191
            18937357
            1385979
            14630314