On Wednesday, 02 August, 2017 21:58:07 Asmita Gupta wrote: > Hi, > > Thanks for the response! > > What I have are crystal structures of the same protein in multiple > conformations, solved by different groups. I wanted to calculate the > residue-wise B-factors for each of these structures and compare how the > values are changing for corresponding residues in these different structures. > e.g. B-factor variation in residue number 200 (Ala) in 10 different > conformations of a protein. > > Hope I have been able to answer the question!
But what is the biological question? You haven't learned much if all you can say is "The B factor of residue 200 is higher in this structure". Do you not have a larger question in mind - on the order of "ligand binding a site X correlates with reduced mobility of loop A-B"? For such questions I suggest (as I always do :-) using TLSMD analysis rather than examining individual B factors. That allows you to say something like "in structure #1 we can identify a distinct group motion of residues in loop A-B, whereas in structure #2 loop A-B appears to move in concert with the entire subdomain XX". This is not the same thing as saying individual B factors are higher or lower. Ethan -- Ethan A Merritt Biomolecular Structure Center, K-428 Health Sciences Bldg MS 357742, University of Washington, Seattle 98195-7742