I believe ESCET was designed to answer your kind of question

Best
Roberto

On 21 Nov 2011, at 22:03, "Filip Van Petegem" 
<filip.vanpete...@gmail.com<mailto:filip.vanpete...@gmail.com>> wrote:

Dear crystallographers,

I have a general question concerning the comparison of different  structures.  
Suppose you have a crystal structure containing a few domains.  You also have 
another structure of the same, but in a different condition (with a bound 
ligand, a mutation, or simply a different crystallization condition,...).  
After careful superpositions, you notice that one of the domains has shifted 
over a particular distance compared to the other domains, say  1-1.5 Angstrom.  
 This is a shift of the entire domain.  Now how can you know that this is a 
'significant' change?  Say the overall resolution of the structures is lower 
than the observed distance (2.5A for example).

Now saying that a 1.5 Angstrom movement of an entire domain is not relevant at 
this resolution would seem wrong: we're not talking about some electron density 
protruding a bit more in one structure versus another, but all of the density 
has moved in a concerted fashion.  So this would seem 'real', and not due to 
noise.   I'm not talking about the fact that this movement was artificially 
caused by crystal packing or something similar. Just for whatever the reason 
(whether packing, pH, ligand binding, ...), you simply observe the movement.

So the question is: how you can state that a particular movement was 
'significantly large' compared to the resolution limit?  In particular, what is 
the theoretical framework that allows you to state that some movement is 
signifcant? This type of question of course also applies to other methods such 
as cryo-EM.  Is a 7A movement of an entire domain 'significant' in a 10A map? 
If it is, how do we quantify the significance?

If anybody has a great reference or just an individual opinion, I'd like to 
hear about it.

Regards,

Filip Van Petegem

--
Filip Van Petegem, PhD
Assistant Professor
The University of British Columbia
Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
2350 Health Sciences Mall - Rm 2.356
Vancouver, V6T 1Z3

phone: +1 604 827 4267
email: <mailto:filip.vanpete...@gmail.com> 
filip.vanpete...@gmail.com<mailto:filip.vanpete...@gmail.com>
<http://crg.ubc.ca/VanPetegem/>http://crg.ubc.ca/VanPetegem/

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