The vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase) is a multisubunit enzyme that acidifies intracellular organelles in eukaryotes. Similar to the F-type ATP synthase (F-ATPase), the V-ATPase is composed of two subcomplexes, V-1 and V-0. Hydrolysis of ATP in the V-1 subcomplex is tightly coupled to proton translocation accomplished by the V-0 subcomplex, which is composed of five unique subunits (a, d, c, c', and c"). Three of the subunits, subunit c (Vma3p), c' (Vma11p), and c" (Vma16p), are small highly hydrophobic integral membrane proteins called "proteolipids" that share sequence similarity to the F-ATPase subunit c. Whereas subunit c from the F-ATPase spans the membrane bilayer twice, the V-ATPase proteolipids have been modeled to have at least four transmembrane-spanning helices. Limited proteolysis experiments with epitope-tagged copies of the proteolipids have revealed that the N and the C termini of c (Vma3p) and c' (Vma11p) were in the lumen of the vacuole. Limited proteolysis of epitope-tagged c" ( Vma16p) indicated that the N terminus is located on the cytoplasmic face of the vacuole, whereas the C terminus is located within the vacuole. Furthermore, a chimeric fusion between Vma16p and Vma3p, Vma16-Vma3p, was found to assemble into a fully functional V-ATPase complex, further supporting the conclusion that the C terminus of Vma16p resides within the lumen of the vacuole. These results indicate that subunits c and c' have four transmembrane segments with their N and C termini in the lumen and that c" has five transmembrane segments, with the N terminus exposed to the cytosol and the C terminus lumenal.