Cooperativity and contact order in protein folding

Marek Cieplak
Phys. Rev. E 69, 031907 – Published 23 March 2004
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Abstract

The effects of cooperativity are studied within Go-Lennard-Jones models of proteins by making the contact interactions dependent on the proximity to the native conformation. The kinetic universality classes are found to remain the same as in the absence of cooperativity. For a fixed native geometry, small changes in the effective contact map may affect the folding times in a chance way, and, to an extent that is comparable to the shift in the folding times due to cooperativity. The contact order controls folding scenarios: the average times necessary to bring pairs of amino acids into their near native separations depend on the sequential distances within the pairs. This dependence is largely monotonic, regardless of the cooperativity, and the dominant trend could be described by a single parameter like the average contact order. However, it is the deviations from the trend which are usually found to set the net folding times.

  • Received 19 March 2003

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.69.031907

©2004 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Marek Cieplak

  • Institute of Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences, Al. Lotników 32/46, 02-668 Warsaw, Poland

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Vol. 69, Iss. 3 — March 2004

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