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Folding@home - Papers |
 | | Here, we report results of a computational model system for fusion in which the ratio of lipid components was systematically varied, using thousands of simulations of up to a microsecond in length to predict the effects of lipid composition on both fusion kinetics and mechanism. |
 | | Our results demonstrate how the character of the solvation interface induces several conformational preferences, including a decrease in mean helical content with increased hydrophilicity, which occurs predominantly through reduced nucleation tendency and, to a lesser extent, destabilization of helical propagation. |
 | | Moreover, our results demonstrate that (1) the computational methodology exists to simulate the multi-microsecond regime using distributed computing and (2) that potential sets used to describe interatomic interactions may be sufficiently accurate to reach the folded state, at least for small proteins. |
| folding.stanford.edu /results.html (12125 words) |
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