Pathways to a protein folding intermediate observed in a 1-microsecond simulation in aqueous solution
- PMID: 9784131
- DOI: 10.1126/science.282.5389.740
Pathways to a protein folding intermediate observed in a 1-microsecond simulation in aqueous solution
Abstract
An implementation of classical molecular dynamics on parallel computers of increased efficiency has enabled a simulation of protein folding with explicit representation of water for 1 microsecond, about two orders of magnitude longer than the longest simulation of a protein in water reported to date. Starting with an unfolded state of villin headpiece subdomain, hydrophobic collapse and helix formation occur in an initial phase, followed by conformational readjustments. A marginally stable state, which has a lifetime of about 150 nanoseconds, a favorable solvation free energy, and shows significant resemblance to the native structure, is observed; two pathways to this state have been found.
Comment in
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A glimpse of the Holy Grail?Science. 1998 Oct 23;282(5389):642-3. doi: 10.1126/science.282.5389.642. Science. 1998. PMID: 9841417 No abstract available.
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