On Monday, 06 March, 2017 19:54:23 Keller, Jacob wrote: > Dear Crystallographers (and cryo-EM practitioners,) > > I do not understand why there is a discrepancy between what crystallographers > use to models disordered regions (b-factors/occupancies) and what the cryo-EM > world uses ("local resolution.")
In both the EM and the X_ray world "uncertainty" is a property of the model, while "resolution" is a property of the data. For a crystal structure the resolution is known as soon as you collect the data; you don't even need to solve the structure. It is a single number, or if you want to get fancy an anisotropic tensor. In neither case is it a model for disorder. As I understand it (I am definitely out of my comfort zone here) EM does not have easily determined uniform resolution. Instead you estimate the resolution by looking at the image-to-image correlation after superposition, where the correlation is computed only over some local region. You can have a core region where images superimpose well and thus have high correlation (good resolution), and at the same time have distal regions where there is image-to-image variation yielding imperfect superposition, lower correlation, and poor resolution. That local resolution can still be calculated in advance of fitting a molecular model. When you do fit a molecular model you may deal with uncertainty by including B factors (well, ADPs) and occupancies just as you would for a crystal structure. Ethan > I am tempted to say that "local resolution" is a misnomer, since I have been > trained to think of resolution as a simple optical or physical characteristic > of the experiment, and things that are blurry can in fact be "resolved" while > disordered-one might think of the blurred wings of an insect in a > long-exposure photograph, in which the resolution is of course ample to see > the wings-but is there a good reason why the two different terms/concepts are > used in the different fields? Could crystallographers learn from or > appropriate the concept of local resolution to good benefit, or perhaps vice > versa? Anyway, if there is a good reason for the discrepancy, fine, but > otherwise, having these different measures prevents straightforward > comparisons which would otherwise be helpful. > > All the best, > > Jacob Keller > > > > -- Ethan A Merritt Biomolecular Structure Center, K-428 Health Sciences Bldg MS 357742, University of Washington, Seattle 98195-7742