Abstract

This paper addresses the problem of algorithmic prediction of protein folding pathways, namely, the transient three-dimensional conformations of protein molecules during folding, under constrained rates of entropy change. We formulate the physics-based prediction of folding pathways as a control synthesis problem, where the control inputs guide the protein folding simulations. These folding control inputs are obtained from largescale trust-region subproblems (TRS) utilizing a computationally efficient algorithm with no need for outer iterations. The proposed control synthesis approach, which leverages the solutions obtained from a special generalized eigenvalue problem, avoids potentially cumbersome and unpredictable iterative computations at each protein conformation. Moreover, the TRS-based control inputs align the closed-loop dynamics closely with the kinetostatic compliance method (KCM) reference vector field while satisfying ellipsoidal constraints on the folding control inputs. Finally, we provide conditions for existence and uniqueness of the resulting closed-loop solutions, which are the protein folding pathways under constraints on the rate of entropy change. Numerical simulations utilizing the KCM approach on protein backbones confirm the effectiveness of the proposed framework.

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