The structural and functional connection between the peripheral catalytic F1 sector and the proton-translocating membrane sector F0 of the mitochondrial ATP synthase is reviewed. The observations examined show that the N-terminus of subunit gamma, the carboxy-terminal and central region of F0I-PVP(b), OSCP, and part of subunit d constitute a continuous structure, the lateral stalk, which connects the peripheries of F1 to F0 and surrounds the central element of the stalk, constituted by subunits gamma and delta. The ATPase inhibitor protein (IF1) binds at one side of the F1F0 connection. The carboxy-terminal segment of IF1 apparently binds to OSCP. The 42L-58K segment of IF1, which is per se the most active domain of the protein, binds at the surface of one of the three alpha/beta pairs of F1, thus preventing the cyclic interconversion of the catalytic sites required for ATP hydrolysis.