Hi Lijun,

it's not a problem if you use mmCIF or PDB with two-letter chain ID (both
supported in Phenix).

Pavel

On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 5:09 PM, Lijun Liu <lijunli...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi:  this must be an old problem but I would like to know if there are
> other ideas to make things easier.
>
> I solved a structure that contains 240 helices of identical sequences in
> the asymmetric unit.  Handling so many chains is really a headache as pdb
> contains only a single column for chain ID (currently support up to 61
> chains).  I had to combine some (say a tetramer) as a single chain for a
> trick, which made me use just enough letters/numbers (A-Z,1-9,a-z).
> However this will need further manual dealing with OXTs (currently I cheat
> with single N of a residue) and raise new problems (like restraints).  Some
> softwares does even not recognize chain IDs like a-z.  SegID might be
> another trick however nowadays many softwares won't take that part, so a
> down-to-chain rigid body / TLS refinement could be impossible, without the
> combination trick.
>
> With tricks I am ok to make things going?  But is there a solution really
> solve the many-chain problem with PDB?
>
> Best,
>
> Lijun
>
>
>
> Sent from my iPhone

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