AbstractSince natural proteins are the products of a long evolutionary process, the structural properties of present-day proteins should depend not only on physico-chemical constraints, but also on evolutionary constraints. Here we propose a model for protein evolution, in which membranes play a key role as a scaffold for supporting the gradual evolution from flexible polypeptides to well-folded proteins. We suggest that the folding process of present-day globular proteins is a relic of this putative evolutionary process. To test the hypothesis that membranes once acted as a cradle for the folding of globular proteins, extensive research on membrane proteins and the interactions of globular proteins with membranes will be required
AbstractExperimentally measured rates of spontaneous folding of single-domain globular proteins rang...
©1993 American Institute of PhysicsThe electronic version of this article is the complete one and ca...
Proteins are essential building blocks of living cells; indeed, life can be viewed as resulting subs...
AbstractSince natural proteins are the products of a long evolutionary process, the structural prope...
Proteins emerged from the evolutionary process shaped by natural selection. Insights into the evolut...
Almost all modern proteins possess well-defined, relatively rigid scaffolds that provide structural ...
AbstractTo investigate a putatively primordial protein we have simplified the sequence of a 56-resid...
We attempt to understand the evolutionary origin of protein folds by simulating their divergent evol...
AbstractResearch into the mechanisms by which proteins fold into their native structures has been on...
Since the time of the Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA), proteins have been the fundamental cata...
Since the time of the Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA), proteins have been the fundamental cata...
Despite their seemingly endless diversity, proteins adopt a limited number of structural forms. It h...
AbstractStrong evidence exists that the translocation of proteins across a variety of membranes invo...
Despite their seemingly endless diversity, proteins adopt a limited number of structural forms. It h...
<div><p>Nature has shaped the make up of proteins since their appearance, 3.8 billion years ago. How...
AbstractExperimentally measured rates of spontaneous folding of single-domain globular proteins rang...
©1993 American Institute of PhysicsThe electronic version of this article is the complete one and ca...
Proteins are essential building blocks of living cells; indeed, life can be viewed as resulting subs...
AbstractSince natural proteins are the products of a long evolutionary process, the structural prope...
Proteins emerged from the evolutionary process shaped by natural selection. Insights into the evolut...
Almost all modern proteins possess well-defined, relatively rigid scaffolds that provide structural ...
AbstractTo investigate a putatively primordial protein we have simplified the sequence of a 56-resid...
We attempt to understand the evolutionary origin of protein folds by simulating their divergent evol...
AbstractResearch into the mechanisms by which proteins fold into their native structures has been on...
Since the time of the Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA), proteins have been the fundamental cata...
Since the time of the Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA), proteins have been the fundamental cata...
Despite their seemingly endless diversity, proteins adopt a limited number of structural forms. It h...
AbstractStrong evidence exists that the translocation of proteins across a variety of membranes invo...
Despite their seemingly endless diversity, proteins adopt a limited number of structural forms. It h...
<div><p>Nature has shaped the make up of proteins since their appearance, 3.8 billion years ago. How...
AbstractExperimentally measured rates of spontaneous folding of single-domain globular proteins rang...
©1993 American Institute of PhysicsThe electronic version of this article is the complete one and ca...
Proteins are essential building blocks of living cells; indeed, life can be viewed as resulting subs...