Editing 1430: Proteins

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{{w|Protein folding}} is the process by which proteins, which are floppy, unstructured chains of {{w|amino acids}} when initially synthesized in a cell, assume a stable, functional shape. If the folding process does not complete, or completes incorrectly, the resulting protein can be inactive or even toxic to the body. Misfolded proteins are responsible for several {{w|neurodegenerative}} diseases, including {{w|Alzheimer's disease}}, {{w|amyotrophic lateral sclerosis}} (ALS), and {{w|Parkinson's disease}}, as well as some non-neurodegenerative diseases such as cardiac amyloidosis.
 
{{w|Protein folding}} is the process by which proteins, which are floppy, unstructured chains of {{w|amino acids}} when initially synthesized in a cell, assume a stable, functional shape. If the folding process does not complete, or completes incorrectly, the resulting protein can be inactive or even toxic to the body. Misfolded proteins are responsible for several {{w|neurodegenerative}} diseases, including {{w|Alzheimer's disease}}, {{w|amyotrophic lateral sclerosis}} (ALS), and {{w|Parkinson's disease}}, as well as some non-neurodegenerative diseases such as cardiac amyloidosis.
  
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Cueball asks Megan if that is a hard problem, to which she replies, that someday someone may find a harder problem. Thus she indicates that at present time, this is the hardest problem in the world! That is saying a lot.  
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Cueball asks Megan is that is a hard problem, to which she replies, that someday someone may find a harder problem. Thus she indicates that at present time, this is the hardest problem in the world! That is saying a lot.  
  
 
Cueball then asks Megan why it is such a hard computational problem; Megan's response is to ask Cueball if he's ever {{w|Origami|folded paper}} to make a {{w|Crane (bird)|crane}}. When he responds in the affirmative, she then compares the problem of predicting protein folding to creating a ''living'' crane by the paper-folding process. The analogy is that a protein cannot just fold to a figurative representation of a bio-molecule, the way a paper crane superficially resembles a live crane; the protein must assume an exact, perfect fold in order to be functional.
 
Cueball then asks Megan why it is such a hard computational problem; Megan's response is to ask Cueball if he's ever {{w|Origami|folded paper}} to make a {{w|Crane (bird)|crane}}. When he responds in the affirmative, she then compares the problem of predicting protein folding to creating a ''living'' crane by the paper-folding process. The analogy is that a protein cannot just fold to a figurative representation of a bio-molecule, the way a paper crane superficially resembles a live crane; the protein must assume an exact, perfect fold in order to be functional.

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