I'm sorry to everyone for still banging on about this,  I'm sure everyone is 
well and truly bored with it,  but I consider my structure to be 
useful/interesting (at least to me) despite its strangeness and limitations
And I really don't want to end up in someone's "what not to do" slideshow at 
some conference or other!

I'm trying to digest the literature about high-B factors, but it mostly 
pertains to examples where researchers are building unobserved features into 
otherwhise strong structures, the assertion being that they have no exerimental 
evidence (imprecise or otherwise) to inform the position of these atoms.

I believe mine is an edge case where the Scaling B factor and the refinement B 
factors are (inappropriately but possibly unavoidably) accounting for the large 
range of flexibility.
The Wilson B factor therefore reaches over 100, and a whole mobile domain 
(which I estimate to have a local res more like 5 Angstrom) has protein B 
factors around 200!
I have of course verified that this domain is indeed present, and although its 
challenging you can see features that that werent in the search model (PTMS 
etc..) even prior to refinement.

I would argue that none of the B factors/ADPs are good representations of the 
true thermal motion/vibration of the atoms, even the ones that are close or 
significantly below the wilson B value.
The detail is however perfectly adequate to model sidechains and other features 
for most of the structure, and there are useful distinctions between the real 
structure and the prediction (AF3).

Pavel had some useful advice about not using B factors to describe things that 
should be described by occupancy (even if you end up having less than 100% 
occupancy  for single modeled conformer of a covalent feature which is 
"present" more or less 100% of the time like the glycan).
The problem is that this principle would apply to whole domains, and actually 
the whole structure if what I think is correct.

In a crystal with a great degree of flexibility (and a wide range in relative 
flexibility), you could argue that the presented conformation definitely has an 
occupancy of less than 1.0 I guess?

I wouldn't be upset at the assertion that the B values are "wrong" and this 
structure should be excluded from any work studying B factors (or perhaps the 
opposite to improve the way disorder is accounted for), but its the claim that 
the atomic coordinates have been modelled carelessly that I would like to avoid!

Obviously, I will discuss this openly in the publication, and only rely on 
features that are unambiguous for my conclusions, but it would be good to know 
peoples thoughts on what they would do or expect to see.

Best

Matthew.







________________________________
From: Karplus, Andy <andy.karp...@oregonstate.edu>
Sent: 06 March 2025 01:02
To: Matthew Snee <matthew.sne...@manchester.ac.uk>; CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK 
<CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] IDS in PDB


Hi Matthew.



Your post reminds me of some work my student did earlier related to the 
question of what to consider as “too high a B-factor.” Back in 2003 a referee 
raised concerns about the “way too high” B-factors of a 2.6 Å resolution 
structure we had determined, because the average B-factor of the structure was 
about 85 Å2. Even though the density for the modeled parts of the structure was 
quite clear that was a red flag for the reviewer.



In response we provided a variety of evidences to validate the structure, and 
then also briefly explored whether the structure having an average B-factor 
much higher than was then considered reasonable for a structure at 2.6 Å 
resolution could be at least in part related to our use of a synchrotron source 
for the data collection. Our thought was that the greater X-ray intensity could 
lead to data with notable signal out to 2.6 Å resolution for a crystal that 
perhaps in a lab setting might have only yielded data with notable signal out 
to a much lower resolution.



To test this idea, we looked at PDB structures and generated a plot comparing 
the average B-factor for structures determined using a lab source versus a 
synchrotron source. There was a difference, with distribution of structures 
based on synchrotron radiation notably shifted to higher average B-factors 
(extending up to ~100 Å2 compared with ~70 Å2).  And crucial to remember when 
looking at this plot is that for many (perhaps most) structures determined at 
say 2.5 – 3.0 Å resolution, the resolution limit at which the structure was 
determined need not reflect the limit to which useful data could have been 
collected. For instance, for a protein crystal with a size and level of 
internal order that would allow for meaningful data to be collected out to 1 Å 
resolution, researchers looking at a series of ligand bound structures may 
choose to collect them all at 2.5 Å resolution, knowing that that is much 
faster and provides enough information to answer the questions they are asking; 
and these structure would give very low refined B-factors compared with a 
structure from a large crystal with a level of internal order that truly leads 
to 2.5 Å as the limit of resolution to which useful data can be collected under 
the best circumstances.



The analysis I’m referring to is in Figure 2D of the paper at 
doi:10.1016/S0022-2836(03)00347-4 .



HTH, Andy



Dr. P. Andrew Karplus (he, him, his)

Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry and Biophysics

NIGMS GCE4All Research Center 
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ph. 541-737-3200

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From: CCP4 bulletin board <CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK> on behalf of Matthew Snee 
<matthew.sne...@manchester.ac.uk>
Date: Wednesday, March 5, 2025 at 11:19 AM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK <CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] IDS in PDB

[This email originated from outside of OSU. Use caution with links and 
attachments.]

Thankyou for those links



One of those papers seems to basically say that atoms that accumulate 
stratospheric B factors are "speculative", but Im working on an example with a 
Wilson B factor of over 100 where some of the weaker features have enormous B 
values.



[cid:22581c74-c780-4454-8ae6-83da9d0e8114]





The crystal is very atypical, very high solvent, and a very wide range of 
flexibility  where whole domains can move almost freely in solvent channels, 
but are still observed.

The features that have obtained super high B factors are the glycans. The 
general shape of the core Glycan can be seen clearly, but the conformation is 
not constrained by any contacts, so the density is extremely diffuse.



The "answer" is obviously that there is an ensemble of conformations (for these 
features and also a whole domain), which would exist at low occupancy but would 
also accrue a lower B factor, but I think it is more appropriate to model a 
single favourable conformer that fits the density.





This is certainly the first X-ray structure that I ever worked on that was 
quite like this, so id like to hear peoples opinions on how I should handle it. 
 The values out of context would certainly raise eyebrows!



I work quite a bit on EM and it appears really similar to some EM examples with 
resolution ranges between 2.8-6A.



I am certain that the features with the very high values are much more than 
speculative, and the model is more accurate when complete, but the B factors 
are certainly not describing the relationship between the model and the data in 
a useful way!



Best wishes



Matthew.





















________________________________

From: CCP4 bulletin board <CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK> on behalf of Italo Carugo 
Oliviero <olivieroitalo.car...@unipv.it>
Sent: 05 March 2025 16:21
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK <CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] IDS in PDB



Just wanted to thank you for your remarkable contributions to this discussion.

These are a couple of articles that dive into the issue of unusually large 
B-factors: BMC Bioinformatics 2018 19 61 
(https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-018-2083-8 
[doi.org]<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-018-2083-8__;!!PDiH4ENfjr2_Jw!GvXajeqHyc78oG7fUDHacPe5o0b-HFbzBJLEkYOApVm5CM5RsNpkyhm68SnJnELJZ8zxhNWbJBcraWaoE7qkEaKzveL3tjJenPIJ8Wkn7A$>)
 & Zeit. Krist. 2018 234 73-77 (https://doi.org/10.1515/zkri-2018-2057 
[doi.org]<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://doi.org/10.1515/zkri-2018-2057__;!!PDiH4ENfjr2_Jw!GvXajeqHyc78oG7fUDHacPe5o0b-HFbzBJLEkYOApVm5CM5RsNpkyhm68SnJnELJZ8zxhNWbJBcraWaoE7qkEaKzveL3tjJenPIIucbmag$>).

Best,

Oliviero



Il giorno mar 4 mar 2025 alle ore 14:03 Frank von Delft 
<0000bcb385fe5582-dmarc-requ...@jiscmail.ac.uk<mailto:0000bcb385fe5582-dmarc-requ...@jiscmail.ac.uk>>
 ha scritto:

Interesting...

Has this got onto the radar (or critical path) of the PDB's mmCIF working group 
(or whatever it's called?)

I'm assuming that's where this would go to next, if the downstream developers 
are ever going to take it seriously.

Frank



On 04/03/2025 12:21, Alexandre Ourjoumtsev wrote:

Dear all,



Fully relevant to this discussion, you might noted that a couple of years ago, 
we (Vladimir Lunin and myself) argued



https://journals.iucr.org/m/issues/2022/06/00/tf5001/ 
[journals.iucr.org]<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://journals.iucr.org/m/issues/2022/06/00/tf5001/__;!!PDiH4ENfjr2_Jw!GvXajeqHyc78oG7fUDHacPe5o0b-HFbzBJLEkYOApVm5CM5RsNpkyhm68SnJnELJZ8zxhNWbJBcraWaoE7qkEaKzveL3tjJenPJrQbXHqQ$>



that, when describing an atomic model, each atom should have one more 
parameter, namely a local resolution with which it contributes to the map from 
which it has been identified - or, in other words, with which value its image 
should be calculated to reproduce the experimental map (and NOT the density / 
potential itself) as a sum of atomic contributions (different atoms may have 
different local resolution).

     Indicating the local resolution large (and neither B-factors large nor 
occupancy small) means exactly that one cannot localize it in this given map; 
again in other words, that the map from which this part of the model was 
constructed had not enough information.



Naturally, cif-format has no obstacle to complete the model description by the 
local resolution value associated to each individual atom. Moreover, even the 
old good PDB format has a space for this; positions 67-72 have been reserved :-)



Going behind the current discussion, as you perfectly know, both B-factors and 
resolution cut-off blur atomic images; however they do it in a different way 
(Ezra already mentioned Fourier ripples). Considering this new parameter allows 
one distingushing these two effects and even to identify (fix?) some errors 
occured when using the current, conventional procedures : see, for example, 
Lunin et al. in Current Research in Structural Biology (2023) :

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crstbi.2023.100102 
[doi.org]<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crstbi.2023.100102__;!!PDiH4ENfjr2_Jw!GvXajeqHyc78oG7fUDHacPe5o0b-HFbzBJLEkYOApVm5CM5RsNpkyhm68SnJnELJZ8zxhNWbJBcraWaoE7qkEaKzveL3tjJenPJqf5yqcw$>



There is a couple more of relevant articles, in Acta D and J.Appl.Cryst, and 
there are works in progress.



I hope, this helps...



Have a nice day



Sacha Urzhumtsev



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