Dear All, Thank you very much for your reply. I have an another doubt and I want to discuss with you.
Sometimes for some structure during refinement and model building we have found a green blob (Fo-Fc and >5 sigma). If I scroll down the blue 2Fo-Fc map to a very low sigma level nearly at 0.5 a really non convincing density will appear. And from the structural point of view, it will be very difficult to put anything within it due to its position within the structure. as an example once I have found an elongated green density without any trace of blue in between a helix and a beta sheet. Is it due to noise? The structure was well refined. What should we do in such cases? Regards amlan. On Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 4:41 PM, <herman.schreu...@sanofi.com> wrote: > Dear Amlan, > > > > The sigma of an Fo-Fc map map depends on the residual noise in your map. > In a well-refined structure, the sigma will be low, so at 3 sigma it will > show very weak features. > > My guess is that your ligand is present in partial occupancy and that you > will find it in your 2Fo-Fc map when you scroll down your contour level. If > you see convincing Fo-Fc density without a ligand being fitted, the > presence of the ligand must be real and you can fit it. However, I would > refine a group occupancy for your ligand. > > > > Best, > > Herman > > > > > > *Von:* CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] *Im Auftrag von > *Amlan Roychowdhury > *Gesendet:* Montag, 10. März 2014 09:09 > *An:* CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK > *Betreff:* [ccp4bb] regarding Fo-Fc map in coot > > > > Dear All, > > Some times during model building in coot we have found that at the > position of ligand molecules and water, there is a good Fo-Fc map (above 3 > sigma), devoid of any 2Fo-Fc map. > > 1.What does it physically mean and why the 2Fo-Fc map was not generated > properly? > > > > 2. Can we fit ligand molecule there? > > Thanks in advance. > > Best Wishes > > Amlan. > > > > -- > Amlan Roychowdhury. > Senior Research Fellow. > Protein Crystallography Lab. > Dept. of Biotechnology, > IIT Kharagpur. > Kharagpur 721302 > West Bengal. > India. > -- Amlan Roychowdhury. Senior Research Fellow. Protein Crystallography Lab. Dept. of Biotechnology, IIT Kharagpur. Kharagpur 721302 West Bengal. India.