The essential features of the in vitro refolding of myoglobin are expressed
in a solvable physical model. Alpha helices are taken as the fundamental
collective coordinates of the system, while the refolding is assumed to be
mainly driven by solvent-induced hydrophobic forces. A quantitative model of
these forces is developed and compared with experimental and theoretical
results. The model is then tested by being employed in a simulation scheme
designed to mimic solvent effects. Realistic dynamic trajectories of myoglobin
are shown as it folds from an extended conformation to a close approximation of
the native state. Various suggestive features of the process are discussed. The
tenets of the model are further tested by folding the single-chain plant
protein leghemoglobin.Comment: Rockefeller preprint RU 93-3-B 28 pages, plain LATEX Figures
available by request to [email protected]