kokoproteeseihin
Kokoproteeseihin is a grammatical form used in the Finnish language. It is the plural, illative case of the word kokoproteesi, which literally translates to "whole protein" or "full-length protein." The root components are koko, meaning "whole" or "entire," and proteesi, the Finnish term for protein derived from the Latin proteum and the English protein. Kokoproteesi refers to an intact protein molecule that has not been truncated, denatured, or otherwise fragmented. In scientific contexts, the distinction between full-length proteins and their subunits or peptide fragments is significant for structure‑function studies, protein–protein interaction analyses, and biotechnological applications. The illative case indicates movement into something or inclusion within something. Therefore, kokoproteeseihin can be translated as "into the full proteins" or "to the whole proteins." The plural illative form is used when a process, reaction, or observation involves multiple full proteins simultaneously. Researchers may describe, for example, that a binding assay transports a labeled molecule into kokoproteeseihin, meaning the molecule interacts with several intact proteins in the sample. This linguistic construction is common in technical Finnish literature that discusses biochemical assays, recombinant protein production, or proteomic workflows.