Proton transport and torque generation in rotary biomotors
A. Yu. Smirnov, S. Savel'ev, L. G. Mourokh, and Franco Nori

TL;DR
This paper models the dynamics of rotary biomotors, specifically the F$_0$ ATP synthase motor, revealing how Coulomb interactions and temperature influence torque generation, switching between shuttling and ratchet regimes, and functioning as a proton pump.
Contribution
It introduces a simple nano-electromechanical model of rotary biomotors that highlights Coulomb coupling's role in torque generation and explains temperature-dependent operational regimes.
Findings
Coulomb coupling dominates torque generation.
Low temperatures favor shuttling regime without rotation.
High temperatures enable Brownian ratchet mechanism.
Abstract
We analyze the dynamics of rotary biomotors within a simple nano-electromechanical model, consisting of a stator part and a ring-shaped rotor having twelve proton-binding sites. This model is closely related to the membrane-embedded F motor of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthase, which converts the energy of the transmembrane electrochemical gradient of protons into mechanical motion of the rotor. It is shown that the Coulomb coupling between the negative charge of the empty rotor site and the positive stator charge, located near the periplasmic proton-conducting channel (proton source), plays a dominant role in the torque-generating process. When approaching the source outlet, the rotor site has a proton energy level higher than the energy level of the site, located near the cytoplasmic channel (proton drain). In the first stage of this torque-generating process, the energy of…
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