Thank you Nat, Pavel,
Actually, the NCS approaches a 3-fold crystallographic symmetry axis
with 3 types of protein molecules plus 2 restraint groups for DNA molecules.
The result is the same with "optimize_wxc=true optimize_wxu=true"
options, Rfree is going up without NCS by ~1.5%. Rwork is practically
the same.
Should I increase the test set (now it's 5%)? or should I leave NCS=true
for the final pdb?
Maia
Nathaniel Echols wrote:
On May 4, 2009, at 6:48 PM, Maia Cherney wrote:
The resolution is 2.15 A. The NCS was always on during the refinement
until we got low R factors (19.2% and 21.2%). Then the NCS was turned
off for the final refinement and the R factors increased, which is
strange as they should be going down when you apply less restraints.
This isn't necessarily true - regardless of which program you use to
refine, R-work isn't actually the refinement target, and minimization
algorithms aren't foolproof either. When you remove the restraints
you are effectively decreasing the observation:parameter ratio, which
increases the risk of overfitting. If nothing else I would expect the
gap between Rwork and Rfree to increase, but I've also seen both
increase when NCS restraints were removed.
It may be possible that the NCS restraints are biasing your test set,
leading to the suspiciously low Rfree-Rwork gap, but I thought this
only applied when the NCS approached crystallographic symmetry, and
there's no such thing as fivefold crystallographic symmetry.
Hopefully someone else on the list can clarify this.
-Nat
-------------------
Nathaniel Echols
Lawrence Berkeley Lab
510-486-5136
[email protected]
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