Many of the early computer science approaches to protein folding were laughably naive, and the assumption about folding described in the Fraenkel paper: "It is believed that the native folded three-dimensional conformation of a protein is its lowest free
energy state, or one of its lowest. "
is not factually correct. In reality, proteins never reach their lowest energy state unless they are very simple proteins, instead, they rapidly reach a state of kinetic interconversion between several accessible states. We can simulate proteins and measure those state transitions.
Really, solving protein folding is about classical approximations and clever sampling.
is not factually correct. In reality, proteins never reach their lowest energy state unless they are very simple proteins, instead, they rapidly reach a state of kinetic interconversion between several accessible states. We can simulate proteins and measure those state transitions.
Really, solving protein folding is about classical approximations and clever sampling.