| Literature DB >> 15353359 |
H A Scheraga1, A Liwo, S Oldziej, C Czaplewski, J Pillardy, D R Ripoll, J A Vila, R Kazmierkiewicz, J A Saunders, Y A Arnautova, A Jagielska, M Chinchio, M Nanias.
Abstract
The evolutionary development of a theoretical approach to the protein folding problem, in our laboratory, is traced. The theoretical foundations and the development of a suitable empirical all-atom potential energy function and a global optimization search are examined. Whereas the all-atom approach has thus far succeeded for relatively small molecules and for alpha-helical proteins containing up to 46 residues, it has been necessary to develop a hierarchical approach to treat larger proteins. In the hierarchical approach to single- and multiple-chain proteins, global optimization is carried out for a simplified united residue (UNRES) description of a polypeptide chain to locate the region in which the global minimum lies. Conversion of the UNRES structures in this region to all-atom structures is followed by a local search in this region. The performance of this approach in successive CASP blind tests for predicting protein structure by an ab initio physics-based method is described. Finally, a recent attempt to compute a folding pathway is discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15353359 DOI: 10.2741/1482
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Biosci ISSN: 1093-4715