Hi Nat,
bonds in COOT do not mean much, as they do not translate into bonded interactions in the refinement programs. Phenix for instance tries to figure out the bonding by itself through some distance based heuristics. However in your case it looks as if the CRO residue may not be defined as a polymer, i.e. part of a protein chain in the monomer library you are using. In Windows the monomer library is located in C:\WinCoot\share\coot\lib\data\monomers. Look at the difference in the headers for CYS.cif and CRO.cif or PTR.cif (phosphotyrosine). The aminoacids or modified aminoacids considered part of the peptide chain have all 'peptide' in the header, CRO does not. That is probably the reason why coot does not make any bonds. This would probably cause problems later on with Phenix as well. You could pull out the CRO.cif into your directory, modify it to make it a peptide and read it into coot and phenix during refinement. I would also run it through REEL to make sure the definitions are kosher.
HTH
Carsten
From: Natalia Ketaren [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2015 5:42 PM
To: Schubert, Carsten [JRDUS]
Subject: Re: Changing an amino acid to an unusual amino acid
Hi Carsten,
Th residue is a part of the correct chain. It just doesn't make an bonds with the residues on either side of it. Is this common for unusual amino acids when adding to the main chain?
Cheers,
Nat
_____________________________
Natalia E. Ketaren, PhD
Postdoctoral Associate
Rout Laboratory
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The Rockefeller University
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On Jun 2, 2015, at 5:26 PM, Schubert, Carsten [JRDUS]