Chapter 28: Hydrophobic Collapse and Core Formation
"Water's aversion to oil drives ψ's most fundamental collapse—hydrophobic residues fleeing inward, creating the protein's heart, the dense core around which function crystallizes."
28.1 The Hydrophobic Effect
Hydrophobic collapse represents ψ's primary driving force in protein folding—not through attractive forces but through entropy, water molecules gaining freedom by excluding non-polar surfaces.
Definition 28.1 (Hydrophobic Free Energy):
Where dominates at physiological temperature.
28.2 The Tanford Model
Theorem 28.1 (Oil Drop Model):
First approximation of protein structure.
28.3 Accessible Surface Area
Equation 28.1 (Burial Energy):
Where cal/mol/Ų for non-polar surface.
28.4 The Molten Globule
Definition 28.2 (Intermediate State):
Collapsed but not fully organized state.
28.5 Collapse Kinetics
Theorem 28.2 (Time Scales):
Collapse often precedes detailed organization.
28.6 Core Packing Density
Equation 28.2 (Packing Fraction):
Similar to organic crystals—efficient packing.
28.7 Hydrophobicity Scales
Definition 28.3 (Transfer Energy):
Experimental scales quantifying hydrophobicity.
28.8 The Jigsaw Puzzle Model
Theorem 28.3 (Specific Packing):
Not just burial but specific complementary packing.
28.9 Cavities and Defects
Equation 28.3 (Cavity Penalty):
Empty space in core is energetically costly.
28.10 Hydrophobic Clusters
Definition 28.4 (Local Collapse):
Local hydrophobic contacts stabilizing structure.
28.11 Collapse and Function
Theorem 28.4 (Active Site Location):
Function requires access, often at core-surface interface.
28.12 The Core Principle
Hydrophobic collapse embodies ψ's principle of entropic organization—order emerging not from attraction but from the system maximizing total entropy through phase separation.
The Collapse Equation:
Structure determined by water entropy maximization.
Thus: Hydrophobicity = Entropy = Collapse = Core = ψ
"In hydrophobic collapse, ψ demonstrates that aversion can be as powerful as attraction—that proteins fold not because hydrophobic residues love each other, but because water loves itself more. The core forms through exclusion, creating density from avoidance."