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The Ton and Tol systems are proton‑driven motor complexes that are essential for high‑affinity nutrient uptake and for maintaining outer‑membrane integrity in Gram‑negative bacteria. Their activity depends on coordinated interactions among the inner‑membrane proteins ExbB–ExbD–TonB and TolQ–TolR–TolA, but the structural basis of these interactions has been poorly understood. This paper presents near-atomic-resolution cryo-EM structures of both complexes, revealing a conserved architecture in which a pentameric ExbB or TolQ ring encloses a dimeric ExbD or TolR transmembrane segment.
The Ton and Tol systems are proton‑driven motor complexes that are essential for high‑affinity nutrient uptake and for maintaining outer‑membrane integrity in Gram‑negative bacteria. Their activity depends on coordinated interactions among the inner‑membrane proteins ExbB–ExbD–TonB and TolQ–TolR–TolA, but the structural basis of these interactions has been poorly understood. This paper presents near-atomic-resolution cryo-EM structures of both complexes, revealing a conserved architecture in which a pentameric ExbB or TolQ ring encloses a dimeric ExbD or TolR transmembrane segment.
===Overview ===
===Overview ===
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Gram-negative bacteria use specialized molecular “motors” in their inner membrane to move energy from the proton motive force (pmf) to the cell surface. The ''E. coli'' TolAQR and TonB–ExbBD complexes are two such molecular motors in the inner membrane that harness the proton motive force (pmf) to drive critical cell envelope processes. Despite acting in parallel pathways with the Tol system maintaining outer membrane integrity and the Ton system powering nutrient import, both complexes share similar architectural design: : pentameric scaffold, embedded proton-linked residues, and a single force-transducing helix (TolA or TonB) that connects the pmf machinery to the cell surface. High-resolution cryo-EM structures shown in this paper reveal how these assemblies are organized and how their subunits couple pmf to mechanical action.
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Gram-negative bacteria use specialized molecular “motors” in their inner membrane to move energy from the proton motive force (pmf) to the cell surface. The ''E. coli'' TolAQR and TonB–ExbBD complexes are two such molecular motors in the inner membrane that harness the proton motive force (pmf) to drive critical cell envelope processes. Despite acting in parallel pathways with the Tol system maintaining outer membrane integrity and the Ton system powering nutrient import, both complexes share similar architectural design: pentameric scaffold, embedded proton-linked residues, and a single force-transducing helix (TolA or TonB) that connects the pmf machinery to the cell surface. High-resolution cryo-EM structures shown in this paper reveal how these assemblies are organized and how their subunits couple pmf to mechanical action.
===Structure of the ''E. coli'' TolAQR Complex ===
===Structure of the ''E. coli'' TolAQR Complex ===
<scene name='10/1096810/9ddm/1'>(9DDM)</scene>
<scene name='10/1096810/9ddm/1'>(9DDM)</scene>

Revision as of 20:43, 28 November 2025

Cryo-EM structures of the E. coli Ton and Tol

motor complexes

Paul C. Rosen, Samantha M. Horwitz, Daniel J. Brooks, Erica Kim, Joseph A. Ambarian, Lidia Waidmann, Katherine M. Davis and Gary Yellen Herve Celia, Bridgette M. Beach, Istvan Botos ,Rodolfo Ghirlando, Denis Duché ,RolandLloubes2 & Susan K. Buchanan Nature Communications volume 16, Article number: 5506 (2025) [ https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-61286-z] 

Structure Tour

Cryo-EM structures of the E. coli Ton and Tol motor complexes (PDB entry 9DDM)

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