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      Folding of small helical proteins assisted by small-angle X-ray scattering profiles.

      Structure(London, England:1993)
      Animals, Computational Biology, Models, Molecular, Monte Carlo Method, Protein Folding, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Proteins, chemistry, Scattering, Radiation, X-Ray Diffraction, X-Rays

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          Abstract

          This paper reports a computational method for folding small helical proteins. The goal was to determine the overall topology of proteins given secondary structure assignment on sequence. In doing so, a Monte Carlo protocol, which combines coarse-grained normal modes and a Hamiltonian at a different scale, was developed to enhance sampling. In addition to the knowledge-based potential functions, a small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) profile was also used as a weak constraint for guiding the folding. The algorithm can deliver structural models with overall correct topology, which makes them similar to those of 5 approximately 6 A cryo-EM density maps. The success could contribute to make the SAXS technique a fast and inexpensive solution-phase experimental method for determining the overall topology of small, soluble, but noncrystallizable, helical proteins.

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