Hi Patrick,
RMSD is a poor measure in this case as it does not account
for B-factors, occupancies, alternative conformations and so
on information a crystal structure model may make available.
Macromolecules are not a bunch of points in space.
While I'm sure more thorough methods exist, I would vote for
the simplest, most direct and obvious one. You can calculate
electron density map using a Gaussian approximation from
model A and B (yes, electron density map - not a Fourier
image of it!). That will naturally account for all:
B-factors, occupancies, other disorder. Then you can
calculate a map similarity measure, such as map correlation,
for instance. After all, why use a cannon to kill a fly?!
If you are interested to follow this route I can explain the
details.
All the best,
Pavel
Hi Phenix users,
I am not a crystallographer but I though you guys
might be a good place to ask this question.
I have 2 super secondary structures, A and B and they
consist of Helix-turn-Strand
Due to the turn the two structures have a poor RMSD
because the two flanking fragments of Helix and Strand
are far from each other but when I superimpose the two
fragments individually(helixA with helix B and standA
with strandB in Pymol they align very well).
Now, is there a way to express this instead of using
the RMSD?
When the two structures align well the RMSD is very
good but a slight movement and the RMSD is awful.
But looking at the two structures I can see they
follow the same path through space.
Thank you,
Patrick