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Old 12-14-2011, 01:41 PM   #1
mjolnir
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Smallest rotary motor in biology, the ATP synthase.


"Linus Torvalds - Dec 12, 2011 - Public
That really is a nice animation. The static pictures in various biology books really don't do it justice.
Rajini Rao originally shared this post:
Smallest rotary motor in biology, the ATP synthase. All the work done in your body is fueled by breaking a chemical bond in ATP, the “currency of energy”. Did you know that you convert your body weight (or an estimated 50 kg) of ATP per day?!

Where does this ATP come from? It is synthesized by an incredibly sophisticated molecular machine, the ATP synthase, embedded in the inner membrane of our mitochondria. Energy from the oxidation of food results in protons being pumped across the membrane to create a proton gradient. The protons drive the rotation of a circular ring of proteins in the membrane that in turn move a central shaft. The shaft interacts sequentially with one of 3 catalytic sites within a hexamer, making ATP (little butterflies in the movie!). The ATP synthase rotates about 150 times/second

To visualize the rotation under a microscope, a very long fluorescent rod (actin filament) was chemically attached to the central shaft. Watch real movies (not animations!) of the enzyme spinning here: http://www.k2.phys.waseda.ac.jp/F1movies/F1long.htm

Notice the rotation is slower with longer rods. The rotor produces a torque of 40 pN nm (40 pico Newtons x nanometer), irrespective of the load. This would be the force you would need to rotate a 500 m long rod while standing at the bottom of a large swimming pool at the rate shown in the movie.

How did this amazing rotor evolve? The hexameric structure is related to DNA helicases that rotate along the DNA double helix, using ATP to unzip the two strands apart. The H+ motor has precedence in flagella motors that use proton gradients to drive rotation of long filaments, allowing bacteria to tumble through their surroundings. At some point, a H+ driven motor came together with a helicase like hexamer to create a rotor driving the hexamer in reverse, to synthesize ATP.

The 1997 Nobel prize in Chemistry was awarded to John Walker and Paul Boyer for solving the structure and cyclical mechanism of the ATP synthase, respectively. This amazing enzyme was also the subject of my own Ph.D. thesis, and my first love!

For #ScienceSunday curated by +Allison Sekuler and +Robby Bowles .
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http://www.mrc-mbu.cam.ac.uk/research/atp-synthase "

One of the most incredible structures in our incredible body!
 
Old 12-14-2011, 01:46 PM   #2
linus72
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And all that just happened by chance!
The proof is in the pudding!
 
Old 12-14-2011, 01:59 PM   #3
Alexvader
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.... trully amazing
 
Old 12-14-2011, 02:33 PM   #4
dugan
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Quote:
And all that just happened by chance!
The proof is in the pudding!
Oh come on. There's a discussion about how it evolved right in the opening post.

Also, the Linus Torvalds quote seems to have come from here?

https://plus.google.com/102150693225...ts/MC9AoThiTV7

Last edited by dugan; 12-14-2011 at 02:51 PM.
 
Old 12-14-2011, 03:33 PM   #5
mjolnir
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dugan View Post
Oh come on. There's a discussion about how it evolved right in the opening post.

Also, the Linus Torvalds quote seems to have come from here?

https://plus.google.com/102150693225...ts/MC9AoThiTV7

Yeah, I follow Linus on google+. He was sharing a post by another person. I'm not trying to start another thread on theology. The "mini-machine" is an exquisite building block of Life.
 
Old 12-14-2011, 04:11 PM   #6
MrCode
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From one perspective, this is fascinating, but only when you start scaling numbers to "demonstrate magnitude" (read: sensationalize the facts ) and using big words. From another, it's just a cold reminder that what we think of as "life" is really nothing more than a cold, mechanistic game for "survival" (really just maintenance of a particular material state), whether we "realize" it or not, governed by purely impersonal forces (oh, but that's right, the "personality" is a result of those "impersonal forces", so everything's okay! ).

Apparently everyone just likes to ogle at the moving parts because it's "cool to watch"; they never consider the existential implications of such a mechanistic view of the human experience.

Sorry to be the killjoy here, and I'm not trying to start a flamewar, but this is how I look at pretty much any of the life sciences now…

(Disclaimer: I'm not defending any religious viewpoints here, nor am I trying to say that the materialistic worldview is incorrect. I'm simply saying that whatever "fascination" one may derive from this kind of information is merely a surface quality; the real implications are much deeper, and much more abrasive towards the human condition.)

Last edited by MrCode; 12-14-2011 at 04:12 PM. Reason: grammar
 
  


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