An exactly solvable model based on the topology of a protein native state is
applied to identify bottlenecks and key-sites for the folding of HIV-1
Protease. The predicted sites are found to correlate well with clinical data on
resistance to FDA-approved drugs. It has been observed that the effects of drug
therapy are to induce multiple mutations on the protease. The sites where such
mutations occur correlate well with those involved in folding bottlenecks
identified through the deterministic procedure proposed in this study. The high
statistical significance of the observed correlations suggests that the
approach may be promisingly used in conjunction with traditional techniques to
identify candidate locations for drug attacks.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure