Joana The developers of molprobity.omegalyze have tried to make their tool easy to use and understand by providing lots of help if you type the command without inputs. This is a common technique that command line tools employ to provide documentation.
> molprobity.omegalyze usage: molprobity.omegalyze [-h] [--show-defaults [{0,1,2,3}]] [--attributes-level [{0,1,2,3}]] [--write-data] [--write-modified] [--write-all] [--overwrite] [--citations [{default,cell,iucr}]] [files [files ...]] [phil [phil ...]] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- molprobity.omegalyze file.pdb [params.eff] [options ...] Options: model=input_file input PDB or mmCIF file nontrans_only=True only print nontrans residues (does not affect kinemage) text=True verbose colon-delimited text output (default) kinemage=False Create kinemage markup (overrides text output) help = False Prints this help message if true text output is colon-delimited and follows the format: residue:type:omega:conformation 'residue' is a unique residue identifier 'type' is either proline or general case 'omega' is the calculated omega dihedral for the peptide between this residue and the preceeding residue 'conformation' is: cis for omega within 30 degrees of planar cis trans for omega within 30 degrees of planar trans twisted for omega not within 30 degrees of planar SUMMARY statistics provide: counts of cis prolines and twisted prolines relative to total prolines with measurable omega dihedrals across all chains counts of non-proline cis and twisted peptides relative to total non-proline peptides with measurable omega dihedrals across all chains Cis Prolines occur in ~5% of prolines (1 in 20) at high resolution Non-Proline Cis residues occur in ~0.05% of residues (1 in 2000) and require clear support from experimental data or homology. Twisted peptides are even less frequent and are highly suspect without high-resolution data. Example: molprobity.omegalyze model=1ubq.pdb kinemage=True ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- positional arguments: files Input file(s) (e.g. model.cif) phil Parameter(s) (e.g. d_min=2.0) optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --show-defaults [{0,1,2,3}], --show_defaults [{0,1,2,3}] show default parameters with expert level (default=0) --attributes-level [{0,1,2,3}], --attributes_level [{0,1,2,3}] show parameters with attributes (default=0) --write-data, --write_data write DataManager PHIL parameters to file (omegalyze_data.eff) --write-modified, --write_modified write modifed PHIL parameters to file (omegalyze_modified.eff) --write-all, --write_all write all (modified + default + data) PHIL parameters to file (omegalyze_all.eff) --overwrite overwrite files, this overrides the output.overwrite PHIL parameter --citations [{default,cell,iucr}] show citation(s) for program in different formats ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For additional help, you can contact the developers at cctb...@phenix-online.org or https://github.com/cctbx/cctbx_project Cheers Nigel --- Nigel W. Moriarty Building 33R0349, Molecular Biophysics and Integrated Bioimaging Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley, CA 94720-8235 Phone : 510-486-5709 Email : nwmoria...@lbl.gov Fax : 510-486-5909 Web : CCI.LBL.gov On Fri, Sep 4, 2020 at 5:35 AM Tim Gruene <tim.gru...@univie.ac.at> wrote: > Hi Joana, > > unless you are constrained to a molprobity tool, you could use the CCP4 > program ANGLES to list the omega angle for each residue. See > $CEXAM/unix/runnable/angles.exam > for an example. > > Best, > Tim > > > On Fri, 4 Sep 2020 11:28:47 +0200 > Joana Pereira <joana.pere...@tuebingen.mpg.de> wrote: > > > Dear all, > > > > Does anyone know which molprobity tool in ccp4/bin lists the omega > > angles for each residue? I see Phenix provides a comprehensive > > validation based on Molprobity and, from what I understand, lists the > > omega angles for each residue. However, I am having troubles to find > > which molprobity tool provides that info. Any idea? > > > > Many thanks! > > > > Best wishes > > > > Joana Pereira > > > > > > -- > -- > Tim Gruene > Head of the Centre for X-ray Structure Analysis > Faculty of Chemistry > University of Vienna > > Phone: +43-1-4277-70202 > > GPG Key ID = A46BEE1A > > ######################################################################## > > To unsubscribe from the CCP4BB list, click the following link: > https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/WA-JISC.exe?SUBED1=CCP4BB&A=1 > > This message was issued to members of www.jiscmail.ac.uk/CCP4BB, a > mailing list hosted by www.jiscmail.ac.uk, terms & conditions are > available at https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/ > ######################################################################## To unsubscribe from the CCP4BB list, click the following link: https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/WA-JISC.exe?SUBED1=CCP4BB&A=1 This message was issued to members of www.jiscmail.ac.uk/CCP4BB, a mailing list hosted by www.jiscmail.ac.uk, terms & conditions are available at https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/