Myths and verities in protein folding theories Part II: From Kauzmann’s conjecture to the dominance of the hydrophobic effect

Authors

  • Arieh Ben Naim The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Edmond J. Safra Campus Givat Ram, Jerusalem 91904

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24297/jac.v3i2.933

Keywords:

Protein folding, Kauzmann’s conjecture, hydrophobic, hydrophilic effects

Abstract

     We start with Kauzmann’s conjecture regarding the factor which is most likely to determine the stability of the 3D structure of the proteins. We show first that Kauzmann’s model-process, on which the original conjecture was based is inadequate for the process of protein folding. The main reason for this is that protein folding involves the change in the conditional solvation of non-polar groups, not the solvation itself. The “condition†here is the presence of the protein backbone. Secondly, it is argued that various hydrophilic effects, both solvation and interactions are more likely to be dominant both in stabilizing the 3D-structure of proteins, as well as in determining the speed and the specificity of the folding process.

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Author Biography

Arieh Ben Naim, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Edmond J. Safra Campus Givat Ram, Jerusalem 91904

Department of Physical Chemistry

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Published

2007-08-13

How to Cite

Naim, A. B. (2007). Myths and verities in protein folding theories Part II: From Kauzmann’s conjecture to the dominance of the hydrophobic effect. JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN CHEMISTRY, 3(2), 205–212. https://doi.org/10.24297/jac.v3i2.933

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Section

Articles