Repository logo

Steric constraints as folding coadjuvant

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Advisor

Coadvisor

Graduate program

Undergraduate course

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Type

Article

Access right

Acesso abertoAcesso Aberto

Abstract

Through the analyses of the Miyazawa-Jernigan matrix it has been shown that the hydrophobic effect generates the dominant driving force for protein folding. By using both lattice and off-lattice models, it is shown that hydrophobic-type potentials are indeed efficient in inducing the chain through nativelike configurations, but they fail to provide sufficient stability so as to keep the chain in the native state. However, through comparative Monte Carlo simulations, it is shown that hydrophobic potentials and steric constraints are two basic ingredients for the folding process. Specifically, it is shown that suitable pairwise steric constraints introduce strong changes on the configurational activity, whose main consequence is a huge increase in the overall stability condition of the native state; detailed analysis of the effects of steric constraints on the heat capacity and configurational activity are provided. The present results support the view that the folding problem of globular proteins can be approached as a process in which the mechanism to reach the native conformation and the requirements for the globule stability are uncoupled.

Description

Keywords

Computer simulation, Conformations, Hydrophobicity, Molecular dynamics, Molecular structure, Monte Carlo methods, Folding coadjuvant, Globule stability, Hydrophobic potentials, Miyazawa-Jernigan matrix, Steric constraints, Proteins

Language

English

Citation

Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics, v. 67, n. 3 1, 2003.

Related itens

Sponsors

Units

Item type:Unit,
Instituto de Biociências, Letras e Ciências Exatas
IBILCE
Campus: São José do Rio Preto


Departments

Undergraduate courses

Graduate programs

Other forms of access