Dear Radu, I would not want to take undue advantage of this already voluminous thread, but your PS takes us into a different direction, namely the whole myth-ridden topic of "weak data" - but that will be for another thread, another time ;-) .
With best wishes, Gerard. -- On Fri, Nov 24, 2017 at 01:02:08AM -0000, r...@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk wrote: > Hi Leo, > > I agree that the horror beamline stories you describe are far too common. > Unfortunately, they start earlier, in the wet lab or even before. Exactly the > same attitude (careless construct design, crystallising whatever "dirty" > samples, not bothering optimising cryoprotection and so on) leads to wasting a > lot of resources, including synchrotron time. In some cases, as people pointed > out, problems such as contaminations (and even more so anisotropic data, for > the matter) are unavoidable. But too often, as we all know, it's simply bad > practice, lack of training etc. Web servers can only help up to a point... > > Best wishes, > > Radu > PS: At least, one day, maximum-likelihood refinement programs will deal with > weak data satisfactorily :-) Nobody likes to throw data away. > > > > Dear all, > > > > to join Pierre's comments on what 'strange' things happen at the > > beamlines... > > yet not too strange for (too) many people: huge screening of salt crystals, > > complete data collection of dramatically low resolution data, full power > > coupled with 360Deg data collection etc. etc. etc. We do unfortunately see > > too > > many 'blind shots, deal with it later, and move on' experiments that it > > becomes depressive. I personally do not see why we would close our eyes to > > servers and/or data analysis tools that could help you think less, or better > > say help you understanding what is eventually happening with your data. > > > > Cheers, leo > > > > - > > Leonard Chavas > > - > > Synchrotron SOLEIL > > Proxima-I > > L'Orme des Merisiers > > Saint-Aubin - BP 48 > > 91192 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex > > France > > - > > Phone: +33 169 359 746 > > Mobile: +33 644 321 614 > > E-mail: leonard.cha...@synchrotron-soleil.fr > > - > > > >> On 24 Nov 2017, at 00:23, Edward A. Berry <ber...@upstate.edu> wrote: > >> > >> My 2 cents worth: > >> I think contaminer is an extremely useful service. I may be a sloppy > >> biochemist, > >> but I am not the only one. There are multiple structures in the database of > >> say > >> bacterioferritin or AcrB that were solved from crystals that were supposed > >> to > >> be something else. I remember in a discussion with the organizer of my > >> session > >> at a Gordon conference, she excitedly announced that there would be > >> preliminary > >> crystallographic data on respiratory Complex I. But by the time of the > >> conference > >> the authors discovered they had crystallized something else. And the > >> beautiful crystals > >> of Paracoccus Complex II (from Doug Rees's lab?) that graced the catalog of > >> Hampton Research (And I believe were part of the basis for the first > >> membrane > >> protein screen) never saw publication. The authors of > >> http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0304416506000894 > >> certainly feel there is a real problem. Some proteins crystallize readily > >> even when > >> present as minor contaminants. And some protein complexes become more > >> heterogeneous > >> if over-purified due to partial loss of loosely-bound subunits. > >> Most of my career I've worked with high-abundance natural-source proteins. > >> During a recent foray into the realm of overexpressed proteins, my group > >> has > >> crystallized (and solved) at least a half dozen wrong proteins from E. > >> coli. > >> I spent months on one of these (ATCase in Rhomb sg with low-level > >> obverse/reverse > >> twinning that caused it to sometimes index as P3) Then solved the rest > >> rapidly > >> by checking the closest several hits with nearest-cell. All of these > >> E.coli > >> proteins > >> were already present in the PDB. I wonder how many were from accidental > >> crystals. > >> And now bacterioferritin (this time from M. smegmatis) keeps coming back to > >> haunt us. > >> > >> I would say any time with a new crystal when a molecular replacement > >> unexpectedly fails, > >> and even before you start to collect heavy atom or selenomet data, it would > >> be worth > >> to submit to nearest-cell and contaminer. I would be more likely to > >> question > >> the > >> utility of an anisotropy correction server, given that modern > >> maximum-likelihood > >> refinement programs can deal with weak data satisfactorily (speaking from > >> ignorance- I'm sure supporting evidence and examples exist, I just haven't > >> bothered to look them up. And I know my colleagues here at Upstate have > >> used > >> anisotropy correction to good effect with a difficult problem- I hope they > >> weren't using filled-in maps!) > >> eab > >> > >> On 11/23/2017 03:24 PM, Tristan Croll wrote: > >>> Dear Radu, > >>> > >>> I think this is a little harsh. Biology is a fabulously messy thing, and > >>> very prone to doing the unexpected. See the excellent paper by > >>> Niedzialkowska et al. at > >>> https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4815408/#!po=13.6905 for some > >>> examples. Sometimes unexpected things (which just happen to have a similar > >>> size to your target) carry through all the purification steps - I remember > >>> having terrible trouble isolating his-tagged IGF-I (not for > >>> crystallization) from Sf9 lysates due to a cathepsin-like protease that > >>> stuck doggedly to the Ni-NTA column even under 8M urea, yet co-eluted in > >>> imidazole. Even if contaminant proteins are barely visible on your > >>> SDS-PAGE > >>> gel, if they crystallise easily and your target doesn???t... all these > >>> things and many others have happened, and have undoubtedly driven the > >>> occasional poor grad student to the brink of giving it all up. > >>> > >>> I guess in these days of relatively cheap and ubiquitous mass spec it may > >>> make sense to sacrifice a crystal to trypsin digest and MS/MS sequencing > >>> just for peace of mind, but in the average case I think that???s likely to > >>> be overkill. Shooting crystals at a synchrotron is now very routine, so I > >>> think it makes perfect sense to provide a computational check for the > >>> (hopefully rare) surprise case. > >>> > >>> Best regards, > >>> > >>> Tristan > >>> Tristan Croll > >>> Research Fellow > >>> Cambridge Institute for Medical Research > >>> University of Cambridge CB2 0XY > >>> > >>> > >>> On 23 Nov 2017, at 19:35, r...@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk > >>> <mailto:r...@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk> wrote: > >>> > >>>> Dear Stefan, > >>>> > >>>> Just a couple of thoughts: > >>>> > >>>> - first of all I think that Gerard is absolutely right, it would have > >>>> been > >>>> nice to raise such issues first with the developers. In my experience, > >>>> Staraniso does a fantastic job if used correctly. > >>>> > >>>> - but if you're OK with public trials, may I ask: why on Earth would > >>>> anybody > >>>> need ContaMiner? Are you trying to offer some sort of computational cure > >>>> for > >>>> sloppy biochemistry? There is zero point in crystallizing crap samples, > >>>> sorry > >>>> to say this. In my 17 or so years in Strubi I've never heard of anybody > >>>> crystallizing a "contaminant", being it a purification tag or whatever. > >>>> > >>>> I suppose this might have happened to somebody you know, hence the > >>>> motivation > >>>> to spend time on the bizarre ContaMiner. Which is a pity, a silly outcome > >>>> would only teach people to do their job (or train their robots) properly. > >>>> > >>>> Best wishes, > >>>> > >>>> Radu > >>>> > >>>> -- > >>>> Radu Aricescu > >>>> MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology > >>>> Francis Crick Avenue > >>>> Cambridge Biomedical Campus > >>>> Cambridge CB2 0QH, U.K. > >>>> tel: +44-(0)1223-267049 > >>>> fax: +44-(0)1223-268305 > >>>> www: http://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/group-leaders/a-to-g/radu-aricescu > >>>> > >>>>> Dear Stefan, > >>>>> > >>>>> Regarding your final paragraph: your server carries a warning > >>>>> with the exact wording: > >>>>> > >>>>> "Submitting StarAniso files can give you suspicious results. Use > >>>>> with care!" > >>>>> > >>>>> It seems rather regrettable that you are posting such a public > >>>>> warning without ever having contacted the STARANISO developers about > >>>>> your observations, nor giving any information about what you call > >>>>> "suspicious" or what the "care" you recommend would consist of. > >>>>> > >>>>> We have taken a great deal of care ourselves in developing the > >>>>> program and offering it to the community through a server, and the > >>>>> least we would have expected is that any pattern of "suspicious" > >>>>> results would be referred to us so that we could investigate them. > >>>>> There may be some assumptions made in MoRDa that we are not aware of, > >>>>> that might be incompatible with assumptions made in STARANISO - who > >>>>> knows? Or it could be that some particularly badly collected datasets > >>>>> are made to look worse after their anisotropy analysis. > >>>>> > >>>>> Could we discuss your observations, and what it is exactly that > >>>>> you call "suspicious", before they end up being referred to in such an > >>>>> uninformative manner as some sort of "Government Health Warning"? > >>>>> > >>>>> I think that would be nice :-) and we would be only too keen to > >>>>> take whatever extra "care" is needed ourselves. We would all learn > >>>>> something. > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> With best wishes, > >>>>> > >>>>> Gerard. > >>>>> > >>>>> (on behalf of the STARANISO developers) > >>>>> > >>>>> -- > >>>>> On Thu, Nov 23, 2017 at 05:02:39PM +0100, Stefan Arold wrote: > >>>>>> Dear Community, > >>>>>> > >>>>>> A quick message to announce the following two new features on our > >>>>>> ContaMiner web server for the automated detection of unwantedly > >>>>>> crystallised contaminants ( > >>>>>> https://strube.cbrc.kaust.edu.sa/contaminer/submit) > >>>>>> > >>>>>> 1) online visualisation of 2FoFc and FoFc maps. In cases of positive > >>>>>> results, the ???UglyMol??? tab allows to inspect 2FoFc and FoFc maps > >>>>>> directly > >>>>>> in the web browser. Thi > >>>>>> > >>>>>> 2) life-update. Previously, results were sent to you once all ~2000 MR > >>>>>> jobs > >>>>>> were finished. Now, the individual results for each potential > >>>>>> contaminant > >>>>>> will appear as soon as they are finished. This feature should > >>>>>> substantially > >>>>>> shorten the time for identifying positive results (i.e. contaminant > >>>>>> detected), which are terminated faster than negative ones. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> 3) custom contaminants. In the ???Advanced??? tab, users can upload own > >>>>>> PDB > >>>>>> files (more than one is possible) to be included as search models. This > >>>>>> feature can be used to include PDB files from your lab bench > >>>>>> neighbour???s > >>>>>> project to test for potential lab internal contaminations (through > >>>>>> bacterial contamination or through mix-up of plasmids or glycerol > >>>>>> stocks). > >>>>>> This feature could also be ???abused??? as a means to use the MoRDa > >>>>>> pipeline > >>>>>> to > >>>>>> run molecular replacements with template structures that are not yet > >>>>>> deposited in the PDB; for example to run molecular replacement and > >>>>>> initial > >>>>>> refinement for liganded or complexed versions of an unpublished > >>>>>> structure. > >>>>>> This might be particularly interesting for crystallographers away from > >>>>>> their usual home software environment (e.g. at the beamline). > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Finally, a word of warning ??? Staraniso files might give false > >>>>>> positives if > >>>>>> they have large anisotropic cuts. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Keep your crystals clean! > >>>>>> > >>>>>> With best wishes > >>>>>> > >>>>>> The ContaMiner Team > >>>>> > >>>>> -- > >>>>> > >>>>> =============================================================== > >>>>> * * > >>>>> * Gerard Bricogne g...@globalphasing.com > >>>>> <mailto:g...@globalphasing.com> * > >>>>> * * > >>>>> * Global Phasing Ltd. * > >>>>> * Sheraton House, Castle Park Tel: +44-(0)1223-353033 * > >>>>> * Cambridge CB3 0AX, UK Fax: +44-(0)1223-366889 * > >>>>> * * > >>>>> =============================================================== > >>>>> > > > > > > > -- > Radu Aricescu > MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology > Francis Crick Avenue > Cambridge Biomedical Campus > Cambridge CB2 0QH, U.K. > tel: +44-(0)1223-267049 > fax: +44-(0)1223-268305 > www: http://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/group-leaders/a-to-g/radu-aricescu