I apologise for typing blinbly: " if one is in, the second can't be" FF Dr Felix Frolow Professor of Structural Biology and Biotechnology, Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology Tel Aviv University 69978, Israel
Acta Crystallographica F, co-editor e-mail: mbfro...@post.tau.ac.il Tel: ++972-3640-8723 Fax: ++972-3640-9407 Cellular: 0547 459 608 On Jan 7, 2013, at 11:48 , Felix Frolow <mbfro...@post.tau.ac.il> wrote: > Why not? They can be mutually excluding! If one is in, the second can be. > This phenomenon brakes a local symmetry. > FF > > Dr Felix Frolow > Professor of Structural Biology and Biotechnology, Department of Molecular > Microbiology and Biotechnology > Tel Aviv University 69978, Israel > > Acta Crystallographica F, co-editor > > e-mail: mbfro...@post.tau.ac.il > Tel: ++972-3640-8723 > Fax: ++972-3640-9407 > Cellular: 0547 459 608 > > On Jan 7, 2013, at 11:28 , Xiaopeng Hu <huxp...@mail.sysu.edu.cn> wrote: > >> Dear All, >> >> We recently resolved an enzyme/inhibitor complex structure. The enzyme >> contains two NCS related active site and we did find extra density in both >> of them.However we observed that the two inhbitor moleculors are not NCS >> related, but partly overlaped if make a NCS moleculor. Has anyone else >> observed this before? Thanks for any help and suggestion! >> >> >> Best, >> >> Xiaopeng Hu >> >