Long range correlations and folding angle in polymers with applications to {\alpha}-helical proteins
Andrey Krokhotin, Stam Nicolis, Antti J. Niemi

TL;DR
This paper introduces the folding angle as a new parameter to analyze the phase structure of polymers, particularly applied to { extalpha}-helical proteins, providing a practical tool for structural characterization.
Contribution
It proposes the folding angle as a novel, easily computable measure for polymer phase analysis, linking it to the radius of gyration and demonstrating its application to proteins.
Findings
Folding angle correlates with polymer phase and can be derived from a single structure.
Estimated folding angle for crystallographic { extalpha}-helical proteins in PDB.
Numerical computation of folding angle using a theoretical model of chiral homopolymers.
Abstract
The conformational complexity of linear polymers far exceeds that of point-like atoms and molecules. Polymers can bend, twist, even become knotted. Thus they may also display a much richer phase structure than point particles. But it is not very easy to characterize the phase of a polymer. Essentially, the only attribute is the radius of gyration. The way how it changes when the degree of polymerization becomes different, and how it evolves when the ambient temperature and solvent properties change, discloses the phase of the polymer. Moreover, in any finite length chain there are corrections to scaling, that complicate the detailed analysis of the phase structure. Here we introduce a quantity that we call the folding angle, a novel tool to identify and scrutinize the phases of polymers. We argue for a mean-field relationship between its values and those of the scaling exponent in the…
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