Thanks, Pavel, George. 

I think the difference is indeed marginal for the scattering function except for

the part close to f000, which may be the major reason why it works fine with 
the atoms.

But in principle there is nothing that prevents us from using the correct 
Cromer-Mann 

coefficients for the ions by interpreting an atom record eg. Fe2+ as the 
appropriate ion-

although our scattering functions despite being ideal seem good enough for at 
least standard

refinement.  

I cannot find a figure right now but ‘ll plot a few graphs of atom vs ion 
scattering functions

from C-Ms when I get to it…

 

Thx, BR

From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George 
Sheldrick
Sent: Friday, June 20, 2014 9:41 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] refine an ion atom with different status

 

I agree with Pavel. Even for accurate small molecule data with R-values below 
3% the differences are hardly significant, the 'B-factors' compensate so well. 
The large majority of small molecule structures are refined with neutral atom 
scattering factors even if ions are present. The calculated scattering factor 
for an isolated ion in the gas phase is not really appropriate for the 
environement of an ion in the crystal anyway. 

George


On 06/20/2014 07:18 AM, Pavel Afonine wrote: 

Hi Bernhard, 

 

phenix.refine makes use of charge if specified in PDB file (rightmost column 
after the chemical element type) to use appropriate form-factors. However, 
occupancies and B-factors are very efficient mops to accommodate a broad range 
of discrepancies between model and reality. So whether the effect of using 
charge is going to be noticeable, I guess, depends on the data quality 
(resolution, completeness, etc) and how strong the effect itself is.

 

Also, it should be relatively easy to make a numerical experiment with 
calculated data to see how the total scattering brakes down into individual 
contributions.

 

Pavel

 

On Thu, Jun 19, 2014 at 6:42 PM, Bernhard Rupp <[email protected]> wrote:

“.. change the valence of ion or metal except by changing the occupancy”

 

Changing the occupancy is entirely different from changing valence. The former 
scales the scattering function proportionally, while the elimination of outer 
shell electrons predominantly reduces the very low resolution part (starting at 
f000) of the scattering function. Verifying the correct scattering function 
(e.g. Fe+++ vs Fe++ vs Fe atomic) used by the refinement program could be 
useful. I am curious: Garib, Pavel, Busters: How is that currently implemented? 
 

 

Best, BR  

 

From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Wang, Bing
Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2014 10:44 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ccp4bb] refine an ion atom with different status

 

Hi CCP4 guys,

I have a structure with heme containing an ion atom in it. Except the 4 
coordinated nitrogen atoms in the heme, this ion also coordinates with one 
histidine residue and one ligand. But I found two negative red balls (top one 
and bottom one) around the ion, which is perpendicular to the heme plate and 
keeping in the same line with the histidine and my ligand (See the figure 
Ion_100 from coot in the attachment). I guess this ion has different status in 
it (e. g. mixture of Fe2+ and Fe3+). I simply tried the lower occupancy of ion. 
It clearly eliminate the negative ball at the bottom and most of the negative 
balls at the top, but also produced one more positive peak with slight movement 
instead of the negative ball at the bottom (See the figures Ion_90, Ion_85, 
Ion_80). The numbers in the image name represents the different occupancy 
("100" means 100%, "80" means 80%).

So any suggestions to solve this problem? Except changing the occupancy, is 
there a more precise way to change the valence of ion or metal in coot, and 
then refine in Refmac or Phenix? 

Thanks!

Bing

 






-- 
Prof. George M. Sheldrick FRS
Dept. Structural Chemistry, 
University of Goettingen,
Tammannstr. 4,
D37077 Goettingen, Germany
Tel. +49-551-39-33021 or -33068
Fax. +49-551-39-22582
 

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