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Understanding ensemble protein folding at atomic detail

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2006

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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Hubner, I. A., E. J. Deeds, and E. I. Shakhnovich. 2006. “Understanding Ensemble Protein Folding at Atomic Detail.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 (47) (November 9): 17747–17752. doi:10.1073/pnas.0605580103.

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Abstract

It has long been known that a protein’s amino acid sequence dictates its native structure. However, despite significant recent advances, an ensemble description of how a protein achieves its native conformation from random coil under physiologically relevant conditions remains incomplete. Here we present a detailed all-atom model with a transferable potential that is capable of abinitio folding of entire protein domains using only sequence information. The computational efficiency of this model allows us to perform thousands of microsecond-time scale-folding simulations of the engrailed homeodomain and to observe thousands of complete independent folding events. We apply a graph-theoretic analysis to this massive data set to elucidate which intermediates and intermediary states are common to many trajectories and thus important for the folding process. This method provides an atomically detailed and complete picture of a folding pathway at the ensemble level. The approach that we describe is quite general and could be used to study the folding of proteins on time scales orders of magnitude longer than currently possible.

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engrailed homeodomain, folding pathway, graph theory, Monte Carlo, protein folding

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