Inferring the rate-length law of protein folding

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Abstract

We investigate the rate-length scaling law of protein folding, a key undetermined scaling law in the analytical theory of protein folding. Available data yield statistically significant evidence for the existence of a rate-length law capable of predicting folding times to within about two orders of magnitude (over 9 decades of variation). Unambiguous determination of the functional form of such a law could provide key mechanistic insight into folding. Four proposed laws from literature (power law, exponential, and two stretched exponentials) are tested against one another, and it is found that the power law best explains the data by a modest margin. We conclude that more data is necessary to unequivocally infer the rate-length law. Such data could be obtained through a small number of protein folding experiments on large protein domains. © 2013 Lane, Pande.

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Lane, T. J., & Pande, V. S. (2013). Inferring the rate-length law of protein folding. PLoS ONE, 8(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078606

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