I'm moderately in favor of the "just let B go through the roof" option. Here's why: Most "user friendly" programs like pymol have an option to color the atoms by B but not by occupancy. Most end-users I interact with know enough to see if coloring by B makes a side chain flaming red, but they'd never think (or know how) to check occupancy. (So if you do set occ to zero, please set B to the max!) And truncating side chains screws up simple electrostatics calculations, which matters if you deal with nucleic acid-binding proteins. Phoebe ===================================== Phoebe A. Rice Dept. of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology The University of Chicago phone 773 834 1723 http://bmb.bsd.uchicago.edu/Faculty_and_Research/01_Faculty/01_Faculty_Alpha... http://www.rsc.org/shop/books/2008/9780854042722.asp
On Thu, 2011-03-24 at 10:26 -0500, Phoebe Rice wrote:
I'm moderately in favor of the "just let B go through the roof" option.
Phoebe, the problem is that disordered side chains occupy random positions and will unfortunately affect the rest of the model, and the upper limit of the B-factor is still too low to prevent that. It is a small effect in most cases, of course, but it is detectable. Ed. -- "I'd jump in myself, if I weren't so good at whistling." Julian, King of Lemurs
participants (2)
-
Ed Pozharski
-
Phoebe Rice