I second Tim Gruene's suggestion of SHELXL; it's perfect for this.
However, there is a steep learning curve, so I strongly urge you to
pay close attention to the SHELXL (and SHELXPRO) manuals.
On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 11:44 AM, Yuri Pompeu wrote:
> Hi everyone,
> I am trying to show that a ligand
[mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Yuri
Pompeu
Sent: 12 September 2012 19:45
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: [ccp4bb] Ligand geometry obs. vs. ideal
Hi everyone,
I am trying to show that a ligand underwent catalysis during a soaking
experiment.
One of the things I would like to show is the
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Dear Yuri,
at 1.18A resolution you can also refine using shelxl. It's basically
your choice on a per-atom-basis what properties you wish to restrain
and which to leave unrestrained.
With L.S. refinement and given enough RAM it can print esds of your
In case it helps… After you've done unrestrained refinement, you can use
prosmart to generate external self-restraints to the current conformation
(using the -self_restrain keyword). This is flexible - you can specify residue
ranges, and it works for protein, ligand, DNA/RNA, waters, etc. These
You can do unrestrained refinement in refmac, at your resolution it may
be OK. If you want to keep protein restrained, you can either use
harmonic restraints or come up with a special cif-file for your ligand
with large esd targets. There is no direct way to tell refmac to
exclude specific r
Hi everyone,
I am trying to show that a ligand underwent catalysis during a soaking
experiment.
One of the things I would like to show is the geometry of the ligand, bond
angles/lengths, dihedrals, etc...
One of my models has a hi-res of 1.18A and the ligand density is really clear
and complete.
bulletin board [CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] on behalf of Ivan Shabalin
[shabali...@inbox.ru]
Sent: Friday, 25 May 2012 5:58 a.m.
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] ligand geometry evaluation
Dear all,
I found that thread in my search of what ideal values for metal Phenix is
using. I tried
Well - I am not familiar with the PHENIX dictionary but you are right; if
you restrain metal bond distances the structure will reflect the restraints
but if you don't restrain the distances then the respective gradients for a
light atom and a heavy one can produce some very odd and unrealistic
resu
Dear all,
I found that thread in my search of what ideal values for metal Phenix is
using. I tried to use that command "phenix.pdb_interpretation model.pdb
write_geo_files=true" for my pdb file, and I get all the values for most atoms,
like:
>>bond pdb=" CB LEU B 332 " segid="B "
pdb="
> d if you do so, be sure to tell us which versions of refmac and coot
you are using
I use Win Coot-0.7-pre-1 (version 4039), and Refmac5 from CCP4i.
It seems you are using an 'old' CCP4 (you dont specify the version,
6.1.3?) with an old(er) dictionary. WinCoot currently uses its own (up
t
Dear Eleanor, Ros,
On 29/04/12 11:32, Eleanor Dodson wrote:
I think you will find the dictionaries for coot and refmac are
different..
REFMAC default dictionary will $CLIBD/monomers/n/NAD.cif
Who knows where coot finds its dictionaries ...
Coot uses the environment variable
COOT_REFMAC_LIB_D
.nl
> Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] Ligand geometry
> To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
>
> Hmm, what are the perfect bonds, angles for NAD in your protein? remember
> that reactive groups can be in a "stressed" conformation, compared to
> ideal in vacuo conformations. As part of their
I think you will find the dictionaries for coot and refmac are different..
REFMAC default dictionary will $CLIBD/monomers/n/NAD.cif
Good knows where coot finds its dictionaries - Paul?
1) check the REFMAC restraints in that dictionary are sensible - spec, are
the planes and chiral centres as
Hmm, what are the perfect bonds, angles for NAD in your protein? remember
that reactive groups can be in a "stressed" conformation, compared to
ideal in vacuo conformations. As part of their functon.
anyway, you'll have to check the restraints definition file (.cif). Bond
lengths and angles are usu
ail.com
Subject: [ccp4bb] Ligand geometry
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Dear All:
I use Refmac5 to refine my model. After the run, I check the model quality by
Coot.
Here is the problem:
In Coot, the ligand - NAD, has bad geometry as indicated by a big red bar.
While the geometry of NAD fit nicely wi
Dear All:
I use Refmac5 to refine my model. After the run, I check the model quality
by Coot.
Here is the problem:
In Coot, the ligand - NAD, has bad geometry as indicated by a big red bar.
While the geometry of NAD fit nicely with the electron density.
If I use refine tools (i.e. regularize Zo
Wolfram,
is there a program that, given ligand model coordinates and a ligand
> library as input, will produce a list of deviations of bond angles and
> distances from the library values?
>
yes,
phenix.pdb_interpretation model.pdb write_geo_files=true
does exactly this: reports model and ideal
Dear colleagues,
is there a program that, given ligand model coordinates and a ligand
library as input, will produce a list of deviations of bond angles and
distances from the library values? I am aware that partial statistics,
in the form of a list of outliers, are produced by refmac. So clearly,
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