Dear All, Thank you Folmer and Fred for your suggestions. Mine is an isomorphous crystal. I had refined without using the same set of Rfree reflections, finally getting larger difference between the R and Rfree. I hope considering the same Rfree set would solve this problem.
Thank you With regards Kavya > Although it is not "mandatory", I think it would be a very good idea, > especially if you have the exact same spacegroup and the native and > ligand-bound forms of your protein are essentially the same. > > If you do not use the same reflections, you are actually not reporting an > independent (free) R-factor. > > > > > Best regards, > Folmer > > >Hello, > >I think this depends on the type of problem you are facing: > >if the 2 crystals are not isomorphous then you cannot have the same >R-free sets; >if the 2 crystals are isomorphous then either you do not worry about >keeping the same R-free set (but then the starting structure must be >"perturbed enough" to get rid of R-free bias during refinement), or you >keep the same indices for the reflections in the 2 R-free sets ("same >reflections" in your message) in which case there is no R-free bias at >the beginning of refinement. > >By R-free bias I mean this: in your "new" (liganded) crystal form, there >are reflections that "have seen the Fo's" during refinement of the >native structure but that are in the R-free set in the ligand structure. >This leads to bias. >HTH, >Fred. >> > Dear users, >> > >> > Is it mandatory to use the same reflections for >> > Rfree calculations of a ligand bound data as that >> > of its native? >> > >> > Thank you >> > With Regards >> > Kavya >> > >> > >> > -- >> > This message has been scanned for viruses and >> > dangerous content by MailScanner, and is >> > believed to be clean. >> > > -- > This message has been scanned for viruses and > dangerous content by MailScanner, and is > believed to be clean. > > -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.