The topology of the native state and protein folding rates

POSTER

Abstract

Characterizing the global conformation of proteins rigorously and separating secondary structure effects from topological effects is a challenge. New developments in Applied Knot Theory allow to characterize the topological characteristics of proteins (knotted or not). By analyzing a small set of two-state and multi-state proteins with no knots or slipknots, our results show that 95.4\% of the analyzed proteins have non-trivial topological characteristics, as reflected by the second Vassiliev measure, and that the logarithm of the experimental protein folding rate depends on both the local geometry and the topology of the protein's native state.

*NSF DMS 1913180 and NSF CAREER 2047587.

Publication: Wang, J. and Panagiotou, E. 2021, The topology of the native state and protein folding rates (submitted)

Presenters

  • Eleni Panagiotou

    • University of Tennessee at Chattanooga

Authors

  • Eleni Panagiotou

    • University of Tennessee at Chattanooga