Abstract
The protein folding problem can be viewed as three different problems: defining the thermodynamic folding code; devising a good computational structure prediction algorithm; and answering Levinthal's question regarding the kinetic mechanism of how proteins can fold so quickly. Once regarded as a grand challenge, protein folding has seen much progress in recent years. Folding codes are now being used to successfully design proteins and non-biological foldable polymers; aided by the Critical Assessment of Techniques for Structure Prediction (CASP) competition, protein structure prediction has now become quite good. Even the once-challenging Levinthal puzzle now seems to have an answer - a protein can avoid searching irrelevant conformations and fold quickly by making local independent decisions first, followed by non-local global decisions later. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Dill, K. A., Ozkan, S. B., Weikl, T. R., Chodera, J. D., & Voelz, V. A. (2007, June). The protein folding problem: when will it be solved? Current Opinion in Structural Biology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sbi.2007.06.001
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