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The Principle of Stationary Action in Biophysics: Stability in Protein Folding
Author(s) -
W. A. Simmons,
Joel L. Weiner
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of biophysics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.164
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 1687-8019
pISSN - 1687-8000
DOI - 10.1155/2013/697529
Subject(s) - protein folding , folding (dsp implementation) , action (physics) , stability (learning theory) , conjecture , motion (physics) , classical mechanics , energy landscape , physics , downhill folding , mathematics , statistical physics , theoretical physics , computer science , pure mathematics , quantum mechanics , engineering , nuclear magnetic resonance , machine learning , phi value analysis , electrical engineering , thermodynamics
We conceptualize protein folding as motion in a large dimensional dihedral angle space. We use Lagrangian mechanics and introduce an unspecified Lagrangian to study the motion. The fact that we have reliable folding leads us to conjecture the totality of paths forms caustics that can be recognized by the vanishing of the second variation of the action. There are two types of folding processes: stable against modest perturbations and unstable. We also conjecture that natural selection has picked out stable folds. More importantly, the presence of caustics leads naturally to the application of ideas from catastrophe theory and allows us to consider the question of stability for the folding process from that perspective. Powerful stability theorems from mathematics are then applicable to impose more order on the totality of motions. This leads to an immediate explanation for both the insensitivity of folding to solution perturbations and the fact that folding occurs using very little free energy. The theory of folding, based on the above conjectures, can also be used to explain the behavior of energy landscapes, the speed of folding similar to transition state theory, and the fact that random proteins do not fold.

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