Abstract
We investigate the role that local conformational tendencies can have in guiding the folding of helical proteins, using simple statistical mechanical models. The theory provides a synthesis of classical models of the helix-coil transition in polymers with an approximate treatment of the effects of excluded volume, confinement, and packing alignment of the helices based on a free energy function. The theory studies the consequences of signals encoded locally in the sequence as stabilization energies associated with three types of local structure: native helical conformations, native non-helical conformations, and native helix caps or start-stop signals. The role of randomness in the energies of conformations due to tertiary interactions is also studied vis-à-visthe difficulty of conformational search. The thermal behavior of the model is presented for realistic values of the conformational signal energies, which can be estimated from experimental studies on peptide fragments. Estimates are made for the relative contribution of local signals and specific tertiary interactions to the folding stability gap.
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