Is it in pdb redo? Take a look here: 
http://www.cmbi.ru.nl/pdb_redo/bd/3bdn/index.html

JPK

From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Misbah ud 
Din Ahmad
Sent: Thursday, April 23, 2015 2:28 PM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] 3BDN, 16.5% Ramachandran Outliers!!!!!

Dear Phoebe A. Rice,
I didn't mean to discredit the work but the statistics of the structure just 
shocked me at the first instance.
I could for example point out to another structure 1ZR2, which has the same 
resolution (the protein Molecular weight is almost the same) and the statistics 
are:
R-work: 0.27
Rfree: 0.319
Ramachandran outliers: 2.8%
The structure was solved by a combination of MIR and MAD three years earlier in 
2005 and definitely they didn't had better softwares.

As per your advice, I tried one cycle of refinement of this structure in Phenix 
and the statistics are:
Start R-work = 0.2816 ; Start R-free = 0.3551
Final R-work = 0.2887 ; Final R-free = 0.3671
Ramachandran outliers: 18.91%
Rotamer Outliers: 25.19%

Being a crystallographic community, isn't it our responsibility that if better 
softwares are available now, we try to re-refine our older structures and 
deposit better models in the PDB. That would help the users immensely.

Misbha







On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 7:06 PM, Mark J van Raaij 
<mjvanra...@cnb.csic.es<mailto:mjvanra...@cnb.csic.es>> wrote:
The abstract of the papers says they used MIR.

Mark J van Raaij
Dpto de Estructura de Macromoleculas
Centro Nacional de Biotecnologia - CSIC
c/Darwin 3
E-28049 Madrid, Spain
tel. (+34) 91 585 4616<tel:%28%2B34%29%2091%20585%204616>
http://www.cnb.csic.es/~mjvanraaij



>
>
>
>
>
> On 23 Apr 2015, at 18:57, Todd Jason Green wrote:
>
>> My guess is they had the best data they could get, did molecular replacement 
>> with the two halves of the repressor and the dna, got a solution and didn't 
>> use appropriate restraints in the refinement. Like Phoebe mentioned, we have 
>> better tools for this these days.
>>
>>
>> ________________________________________
>> From: CCP4 bulletin board 
>> [CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK<mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>] on behalf of Mark J 
>> van Raaij [mjvanra...@cnb.csic.es<mailto:mjvanra...@cnb.csic.es>]
>> Sent: Thursday, April 23, 2015 11:49 AM
>> To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK<mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
>> Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] 3BDN, 16.5% Ramachandran Outliers!!!!!
>>
>> How reliable is too general a question - it depends on what you want to know.
>> At 3.9Å they could probably place the phosphate atoms quite well and see the 
>> general fold of the protein.
>> Finer details will be less reliable, i.e. where the exact side-chains are 
>> etc.
>> They could probably have forced more amino acids into favourable 
>> Ramachandran angles, but would that have made the structure "better"? Would 
>> these favourable angles have been more "right"? At 3.9Å you can't know for 
>> sure.
>> Would they have been able to draw more biological conclusions? I'd say not.
>> As long as they do not draw more conclusions in the paper than what is 
>> supported by the medium-resolution data, the structure provides useful 
>> information.
>>
>> Mark J van Raaij
>> Dpto de Estructura de Macromoleculas
>> Centro Nacional de Biotecnologia - CSIC
>> c/Darwin 3
>> E-28049 Madrid, Spain
>> tel. (+34) 91 585 4616
>> http://www.cnb.csic.es/~mjvanraaij
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 23 Apr 2015, at 18:03, Misbah ud Din Ahmad wrote:
>>
>>> Dear crystallographers,
>>>
>>> The PDB entry
>>> http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/explore.do?structureId=3BDN
>>> has 16.5% Ramachandran outliers. When I opened this PDB file in coot and 
>>> checked for Ramachandran outliers, the results are:
>>> In preffered region: 58.04%
>>> In allowed regions: 19.78%
>>> Outliers: 22.17%      !!!!!!!!!
>>>
>>> With an R-free of 37.4% at 3.9 A resolution, could you please tell me how 
>>> reliable this structure of Lambda repressor bound to DNA is?
>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>> Misbha
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>

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