Funnel-like landscapes are widely used to visualize protein folding. It might seem that any funnel-like energy landscape helps to avoid the 'Levinthal paradox', i.e. to avoid sampling the impossibly large number of conformations for a folding protein. This cunning suggestion, reinforced by beautiful drawings of the energy funnels, stimulated some simple models of protein folding; one of them [D.J. Bicout and A. Szabo (2000) Protein Sci., 9, 452-465] is especially straightforward and instructive. A thorough analysis of this strict funnel model (which does not consider a nucleation of phase separation in the course of folding) shows that it cannot provide a simultaneous explanation for both major features observed for protein folding: (i) folding within non-astronomical time, and (ii) co-existence of the native and the unfolded states during the folding process. On the contrary, the nucleation mechanism of protein folding can account for both these major features simultaneously.
CITATION STYLE
Bogatyreva, N. S., & Finkelstein, A. V. (2001). Cunning simplicity of protein folding landscapes. Protein Engineering, 14(8), 521–523. https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/14.8.521
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