- What is folded state?
- What are folds in bioinformatics?
- What is the native folded state of a protein?
- What is two-state folding?
What is folded state?
Folded proteins are held together by various molecular interactions. During translation, each protein is synthesized as a linear chain of amino acids or a random coil which does not have a stable 3D structure. The amino acids in the chain eventually interact with each other to form a well-defined, folded protein.
What are folds in bioinformatics?
Protein folding is the physical process by which a protein chain is translated to its native three-dimensional structure, typically a "folded" conformation by which the protein becomes biologically functional.
What is the native folded state of a protein?
In biochemistry, the native state of a protein is its properly folded and assembled form with operative structure and function. The native state of a protein needs all four levels of biomolecular structure, with secondary to quaternary structure formed by weak interactions along the covalently-bonded backbone.
What is two-state folding?
The folding of some proteins appears to be a two-state kinetic process. A two-state kinetic model is justified if protein molecules rapidly equilibrate between different unfolded conformations prior to complete folding.