Quantum conformational transition in biological macromolecule
LiaoFu Luo

TL;DR
This paper introduces a quantum theoretical framework for understanding protein folding, emphasizing the role of molecular torsion as a slow variable and deriving a rate formula that explains temperature dependence and quantum coherence in folding.
Contribution
It presents a novel quantum conformational transition model for protein folding, incorporating torsion dynamics and phase transformations, providing a unified approach to biological conformational changes.
Findings
Derived a quantum-based protein folding rate formula.
Explained non-Arrhenius temperature dependence of folding.
Estimated quantum coherence times in torsional angles.
Abstract
The conformational change of biological macromolecule is investigated from the point of quantum transition. A quantum theory on protein folding is proposed. Compared with other dynamical variables such as mobile electrons, chemical bonds and stretching-bending vibrations the molecular torsion has the lowest energy and can be looked as the slow variable of the system. Simultaneously, from the multi-minima property of torsion potential the local conformational states are well defined. Following the idea that the slow variables slave the fast ones and using the nonadiabaticity operator method we deduce the Hamiltonian describing conformational change. It is proved that the influence of fast variables on the macromolecule can fully be taken into account through a phase transformation of slow variable wave function. Starting from the conformation- transition Hamiltonian the nonradiative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtein Structure and Dynamics · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
