Lattice protein

Lattice proteins are highly simplified computer models of proteins which are used to investigate protein folding.

Because proteins are such large molecules, containing hundreds or thousands of atoms, it is not possible with current technology to simulate more than a few microseconds of their behaviour in all-atom detail. Hence real proteins cannot be folded on a computer. Lattice proteins, however, are simplified in two ways: the amino acids are modelled as single "beads" rather than modelling every atom, and the beads are restricted to a rigid (usually cubic) lattice. This simplification means they can fold to their energy minima in a time quick enough to be simulated.

Lattice proteins are made to resemble real proteins by introducing an energy function, a set of conditions which specify the energy of interaction between neighbouring beads, usually taken to be those occupying adjacent lattice sites. The energy function mimics the interactions between amino acids in real proteins, which include steric, hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding effects. The beads are divided into types, and the energy function specifies the interactions depending on the bead type, just as different types of amino acid interact differently. One of the most popular lattice models, HP, features just two bead types - hydrophobic (H) and polar (P) - and mimics the hydrophobic effect by specifying a negative (favourable) interaction between H beads.

Due to the energy function, every lattice protein has an energetic ground state or native state. The relative positions of the beads in the native state constitute the lattice protein's tertiary structure. Lattice proteins do not have genuine secondary structure, although some researchers have claimed that they can be extrapolated to real protein structures which do include secondary structure, by appealing to the same law by which the phase diagrams of different substances can be scaled onto one another.

By varying the energy function and the bead sequence of the chain (the primary structure), effects on the native state structure and the kinetics (rate) of folding can be explored, and this may provide insights into the folding of real proteins. In particular, lattice models have been used to investigate the energy landscapes of proteins, i.e. the variation of their internal free energy as a function of conformation.

See also: Lattice protein, Amino acid, Atom, Chemical kinetics, Dipole, Energy, Free energy, Hydrogen bonding, Hydrophobic, Hydrophobic effect