THE WORLD OF PROTON PUMPS Nathan Nelson uite frequently an observer
looks at a life phenomenon and asks himself why nature took this route
out of several other available mec anisms. In order to understand this
challenge he may first try to reconstruct the evolution of the process
taking into account the main driving forces that were assumed to exist
during the last 3. 5 billion years on earth. Now we know that the
electrochemical gradient of protons is the universal high-energy
intermediate produced and uti- lized by every living cell in nature.
This high energy intermediate is an expression of different
concentrations of active protons in the two faces of biological
membranes. Why then did nature elect to utilize a pre- dominantly
electrochemical gradient of protons and no other ion? The answer to this
question may lie in the environment in which the first living creatures
evolved. Some of them may have been challenged by an acidic environment
that lowered their internal pH (by a proton leak through their
membranes) to lethal levels. To counteract these inci- dents proton
pumps evolved. Two independent systems were devel- oped. One was a
proton pump coupled to energetically downhill vectorial electron
transport across membranes and the second was an ATP-dependent proton
pump. Both of them pump protons outward from the cells generating an
electrochemical gradient of protons.