WATER MEDIATION IN PROTEIN FOLDING AND MOLECULAR RECOGNITION

Center for Theoretical Biological Physics

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Water is essential for life in many ways, and without it biomolecules might no longer truly be biomolecules. In particular, water is important to the structure, stability, dynamics, and function of biological macromolecules. In protein folding, water mediates the collapse of the chain and the search for the native topology through a funneled energy landscape. Water actively participates in molecular recognition by mediating the interactions between binding partners and contributes to either enthalpic or entropic stabilization. Accordingly, water must be included in recognition and structure prediction codes to capture specificity. Thus water should not be treated as an inert environment, but rather as an…

Citation impact

1,054
total citations
FWCI
17.31
Percentile
100%
References
153
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biomolecule
  • Folding (DSP implementation)
  • Molecular dynamics
  • Molecular recognition
  • Function (biology)
  • Nucleic acid
  • Protein folding
  • Macromolecule
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Clean water and sanitation
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