Protein design

Protein design is the rational design of new protein molecules to design novel activity, behavior, or purpose, and to advance basic understanding of protein function.[1] Proteins can be designed from scratch (de novo design) or by making calculated variants of a known protein structure and its sequence (termed protein redesign). Rational protein design approaches make protein-sequence predictions that will fold to specific structures. These predicted sequences can then be validated experimentally through methods such as peptide synthesis, site-directed mutagenesis, or artificial gene synthesis.

Rational protein design dates back to the mid-1970s.[2] Recently, however, there were numerous examples of successful rational design of water-soluble and even transmembrane peptides and proteins, in part due to a better understanding of different factors contributing to protein structure stability and development of better computational methods.

  1. ^ Korendovych, Ivan (March 19, 2018). "Minimalist design of peptide and protein catalysts". American Chemical Society. Retrieved March 22, 2018.
  2. ^ Richardson, JS; Richardson, DC (July 1989). "The de novo design of protein structures". Trends in Biochemical Sciences. 14 (7): 304–9. doi:10.1016/0968-0004(89)90070-4. PMID 2672455.

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