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Significance Mitochondria generate the cellular fuel ATP to sustain complex life. Production of ATP depends on the oxidation of energy-rich compounds to produce the proton motive force (pmf), a chemical potential difference for protons, across the inner membrane. The pmf drives the ATP synthase, a molecular machine with a rotary action, to synthesize ATP. We have shown that the assembly of human ATP synthase in the inner organellar membrane involves the formation of a monomeric intermediate made from 25 nuclear-encoded proteins into which the two mitochondrially encoded subunits are inserted and then sealed by association of another nuclear-encoded protein, thereby dimerizing the complex. Association of a final nuclear protein oligomerizes the dimers back-to-face along the cristae edges.
He et al. (Mon,) studied this question.