Literature DB >> 27743150

Exploring the Levinthal limit in protein folding.

Leonor Cruzeiro1, Léo Degrève2.   

Abstract

According to the thermodynamic hypothesis, the native state of proteins is uniquely defined by their amino acid sequence. On the other hand, according to Levinthal, the native state is just a local minimum of the free energy and a given amino acid sequence, in the same thermodynamic conditions, can assume many, very different structures that are as thermodynamically stable as the native state. This is the Levinthal limit explored in this work. Using computer simulations, we compare the interactions that stabilize the native state of four different proteins with those that stabilize three non-native states of each protein and find that the nature of the interactions is very similar for all such 16 conformers. Furthermore, an enhancement of the degree of fluctuation of the non-native conformers can be explained by an insufficient relaxation to their local free energy minimum. These results favor Levinthal's hypothesis that protein folding is a kinetic non-equilibrium process.

Keywords:  Kinetic mechanism; Molecular dynamics; Protein folding

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27743150      PMCID: PMC5323343          DOI: 10.1007/s10867-016-9431-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Phys        ISSN: 0092-0606            Impact factor:   1.365


  18 in total

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