On Tuesday, 06 February 2018 17:25:13 Nadia Leloup wrote:
> Dear all,
> 
> I was looking at a 3 angstrom structure from 2015 with relatively bad
> statistics, so I decided to look at the pdb-redo of said structure.
> Surprisingly, pdb-redo statistics are even worse. 

You say "even worse", but the subset of statistics you show does not
look so bad for a 3A structure either before or after re-refinement.
Other than maybe the Rfree itself, which is what you ask about.

> As you can see on the
> attached picture, the pdb-redo Rfree comes with a caveat:
> 
> R-free was considered biased, the estimated unbiased R-free was used
> 
> I understand that the R-free was considered biased because a new (Rfree)
> test set was determined. However, I'm not sure what is the unbiased R-free
> is / how it is calculated in this case?

>From the "How does it work" page on the PDB Redo web site,
my understanding is that rather than calculating Rfree from the
re-refinement, various other quality measures are used to 
calculate an expected Rfree/R ratio consistent with other 
structures of similar quality.
This ratio is then multipled by R to yield an estimated Rfree.

Robbie Joosten will probably correct me if I have that wrong :-)

        cheers,

                Ethan

> 
> Thanks in advance,
> 
> Best,
> 
> Nadia

-- 
Ethan A Merritt, Dept of Biochemistry
Biomolecular Structure Center,  K-428 Health Sciences Bldg
MS 357742,   University of Washington, Seattle 98195-7742

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