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There are nearly 100 000 different protein sequences encoded in the
human genome, each with its own specific fold. Understanding how a
newly formed polypeptide sequence finds its way to the correct fold
is one of the greatest challenges in the modern structural biology.
The aim of this thesis is to provide novel insights into protein
folding by considering the problem from the point of view of
statistical mechanics. The thesis starts by investigating the
fundamental degrees of freedom in polypeptides that are responsible
for the conformational transitions. This knowledge is then applied
in the statistical mechanics description of helix coil transitions
in polypeptides. Finally, the theoretical formalism is generalized
to the case of proteins in an aqueous environment. The major
novelty of this work lies in combining (a) a formalism based on
fundamental physical properties of the system and (b) the resulting
possibility of describing the folding unfolding transitions
quantitatively. The clear physical nature of the formalism opens
the way to further applications in a large variety of systems and
processes.
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Alice Oswald
Hardcover
R720
Discovery Miles 7 200
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