info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Frustration, function and folding
Fecha
2018-02-05Registro en:
Ferreiro, Diego; Komives, Elizabeth A.; Wolynes, Peter G.; Frustration, function and folding; Current Biology; Current Opinion In Structural Biology; 48; 5-2-2018; 68-73
0959-440X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Ferreiro, Diego
Komives, Elizabeth A.
Wolynes, Peter G.
Resumen
Natural protein molecules are exceptional polymers. Encoded in apparently random strings of amino-acids, these objects perform clear physical tasks that are rare to find by simple chance. Accurate folding, specific binding, powerful catalysis, are examples of basic chemical activities that the great majority of polypeptides do not display, and are thought to be the outcome of the natural history of proteins. Function, a concept genuine to Biology, is at the core of evolution and often conflicts with the physical constraints. Locating the frustration between discrepant goals in a recurrent system leads to fundamental insights about the chances and necessities that shape the encoding of biological information.