Old and new views of protein folding : proceedings of the 24th Taniguchi Internatinal Symposium, Division of Biophysics, held in Kisarazu, 3-7 March 1999
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Bibliographic Information
Old and new views of protein folding : proceedings of the 24th Taniguchi Internatinal Symposium, Division of Biophysics, held in Kisarazu, 3-7 March 1999
(International congress series, 1194)
Elsevier, 1999
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index of authors
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Elucidation of protein folding mechanisms is a fundamental problem of molecular biological physics. During the last several years, remarkable advances have been made in this field. Experimentally, folding intermediates have been characterized in detail using various new techniques, and certain small proteins are found to fold in a two-state manner. Theoretical studies of simple model proteins have put forward new ideas of folding, and recent progress in computational techniques has made unfolding/folding simulations very realistic. These advances have allowed us to describe the protein folding in a precise manner, but our questions of how a protein folds into its specific native structure have become more hotly debated. "Old views" are often being challenged by "new views." We have reached a very exciting stage of the protein folding studies, and combination of the experimental and theoretical studies is indispensable for further clarification of the folding problem.
This book thus describes the recent advances in the following topics: kinetic folding mechanisms, characterization of folding intermediates, fast folding reactions, structural stability of proteins, theory of protein folding, computer simulations, and molecular evolution in relation to protein folding. This book will appeal to researchers and graduate students of biophysics, biochemistry and molecular biology.
Table of Contents
Preface. Folding Intermediates. Folding of |A-lactoglobulin, a case of the inconsistency of local and non-local interactions (Y. Goto et al.). Dynamic stability of bovine |A-lactoglobulin studied by hydrogen/deuterium exchange (V. Forge et al.). Folding intermediates of equine |A-lactoglobulin (M. Ikeguchi). Structural analysis of protein folding intermediates by solution X-ray scattering (M. Arai et al.). Nonnative structure of proteins and its implications for protein folding (K. Soda, Y. Seki). Fast Folding Reactions. Dynamics of |A-helices, |A-Hairpins and loops (J. Hofrichter et al.). Kinetic and structural characterization of early events in protein folding (H. Roder et al.). CD measurements on the early folding intermediate of cytochrome c using the fast flow mixer (S. Takahashi et al.). Fast protein dynamics probed by vibrational spectroscopy (Y. Mizutani, K. Yamamoto, T. Kitagawa). Theory of Protein Folding. The consistency principle revisited (N. Go). Complete structure reconstruction for model proteins using mutation calorimetry (M.P. Morrissey, E.I. Shakhnovich). Site resolved landscape theory of fast folding proteins (S. Takada). Hierarchy and connectivity in the folding funnel (H.K. Nakamura, M. Sasai). Folding Mechanisms I. The folding mechanisms of |A-lactalbumin and Ca2+-binding lysozyme (K. Kuwajima et al.). Determinants of the native-like tertiary topology in the |A-lactalbumin molten globule (Z.-Y. Peng). Kinetic folding reactions and molecular dynamics simulations of |A-lactalbumin (T. Yoda et al.). Folding-unfolding processes of four species of 3SS-variant of lysozyme -- the role of an individual disulfide bridge (A. Yokota et al.). Structure and Stability. Evaluation of some factors that contribute to conformational stability of a protein using database o
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