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Valerie Daggett

Researcher at University of Washington

Publications -  246
Citations -  18237

Valerie Daggett is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Protein folding & Protein structure. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 241 publications receiving 17089 citations. Previous affiliations of Valerie Daggett include University of Virginia & Stanford University.

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The molecular basis for the chemical denaturation of proteins by urea

TL;DR: These simulations suggest that urea denatures proteins via both direct and indirect mechanisms, and that through urea's weakening of water structure, water became free to compete with intraprotein interactions.
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Calibration and Testing of a Water Model for Simulation of the Molecular Dynamics of Proteins and Nucleic Acids in Solution

TL;DR: In this paper, a flexible three-centered water model (F3C) is proposed for simulation of biological macromolecules in solution, and the model is further tested by comparing calculated energetic, structural, and dynamic properties of liquid water, at several temperatures and pressures, with experiment.
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Protein folding and unfolding at atomic resolution.

TL;DR: Experiment and simulation are now conspiring to give atomic-level descriptions of protein folding relevant to folding, misfolding, trafficking, and degradation in the cell.
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Is there a unifying mechanism for protein folding

TL;DR: Proteins appear to fold by diverse pathways, but variations of a simple mechanism - nucleation-condensation - describe the overall features of folding of most domains and eventually follows a framework mechanism where the transition state is assembled from pre-formed secondary structural elements.
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The complete folding pathway of a protein from nanoseconds to microseconds

TL;DR: Molecular dynamics simulations give rate constants and structural details highly consistent with experiment, thereby completing the description of folding at atomic resolution.