Hi Andreas,

This maybe a little ott, but the Rosetta suite of modelling programs will do
docking with some minimisation and side chain optimisation. You can also
enforce symmetry.

http://www.rosettacommons.org/
http://depts.washington.edu/bakerpg/

It is free to academics and runs on most platforms.

Hope this helps,

Dave

On 29/11/2007, Andreas Förster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> Karen question reminded me that I have one also.
>
> I study a protein that homodimerizes via a long helix.  A number of
> homologs exist.  They all dimerize, but the structure is only known of
> the first.  Homology is high enough that I can easily thread the
> homologs' sequences onto the structure.
>
> How do I go about analyzing the new dimerization interfaces?  Before
> having Pisa have a go, I'd like to do some sort of minimization to allow
> for wiggling of one helix with respect to the other and rotamerization
> of side chains.  What I'm ultimately interested in is which homologs are
> likely to form heterooligomers.  There is some experimental evidence for
> that.
>
> I'm grateful for suggestions.
>
>
> Andreas
>
> --
>           >>  Andreas Förster  <<
>           Imperial College London
> https://wasatch.biochem.utah.edu/~andreas
>



-- 
============================
David C. Briggs PhD
Father & Crystallographer
http://personalpages.manchester.ac.uk/staff/David.C.Briggs/
AIM ID: dbassophile
============================

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