Protein folding and misfolding play central roles in both health and disease, yet traditional structural analyses often fall short in explaining their functional consequences. This manuscript introduces a thermodynamic framework that integrates three molecular dimensions—chemical composition (constitution), stereochemistry (configuration), and conformational flexibility (conformation)—to better understand how proteins maintain function or drift toward dysfunction. By reframing potential energy and entropy as cooperative forces that govern structural transitions, this model provides insight into the dynamic behavior of proteins in physiological and pathological contexts. Correct folding involves a regulated increase in structural order, a reduction in conformational entropy, and a rise in internal potential energy that supports molecular precision. In contrast, disruptions in this balance can lead to misfolded proteins, aggregation, and disease states such as neurodegeneration, cancer, or immune dysfunction. The framework also highlights how flexible, disordered regions within proteins—often overlooked—can be targeted to design more selective, adaptive, and less toxic therapeutics. By linking molecular structure to biological outcome, this perspective offers a clinically relevant lens for advancing drug development, understanding disease mechanisms, and designing precision medicine strategies.
Jawad Alzeer (Wed,) studied this question.