Berhard,

Then you have to define what you mean by "smallest". SHELXL uses the 
(ASCII) alphabetical order of the three atom names for this purpose 
(SHELX manual page 7-23) so that it is unambiguous (since the names
are not allowed to be the same), but presumably other programs use 
other conventions (e.g. the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog rules).

George

Prof. George M. Sheldrick FRS
Dept. Structural Chemistry,
University of Goettingen,
Tammannstr. 4,
D37077 Goettingen, Germany
Tel. +49-551-39-3021 or -3068
Fax. +49-551-39-22582


On Mon, 19 Apr 2010, Bernhard Rupp wrote:

> "The problem of discrete values in restraints can be circumvented by
> computing
> a corresponding continuous value such as a chiral volume Vc, which is given
> by
> a scalar triple vector product A • (B x C) originating at the central atom.
> With the
> smallest ligand pointed toward the observer and clockwise assignment of the
> vectors, the sign of the chiral volume is positive, and computes to about
> 2.5 Å3.
> 
> An alternative method of restraining chirality is by restraining the
> improper torsion
> (or improper dihedral or zeta-value) between Ca–N–C–Cb to +34 deg."
> 
> p 630 ;-)
> 
> BR
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:ccp...@jiscmail.ac.uk] On Behalf Of
> Patrick Loll
> Sent: Monday, April 19, 2010 2:40 PM
> To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: [ccp4bb] chiral volumes--2nd try
> 
> Sorry, the original post looks garbled (mirroring my internal state,  
> no doubt).  I'm trying again, sending as plain text:
> 
> Friends,
> 
> A question about the definition of chiral volumes:
> 
> I'm looking for the definition of the SIGN of a chiral volume. The  
> only ccp4 reference I can find (readily) is this:
> 
>         http://www.ysbl.york.ac.uk/~garib/refmac/docs/theory/chiral.html
> 
> This page gives an algorithm for determining the sign, which I  
> paraphrase here:
> 
> *  Call the central (chiral) carbon a, and its three non-hydrogen  
> substituents b, c, and d.
> *  Arrange things so that as you look from b to c to d, your eye is  
> moving clockwise.
> *  If atom a is below the plane formed by b, c, & d, then the chiral  
> volume is positive (otherwise negative)
> 
> Clear enough.  However, when I start to apply this rule to basically  
> every library I have ever used, I get the opposite result.  Try it,  
> for example, with the ALA.cif file distributed with ccp4:
> 
> _chem_comp_chir.comp_id
> _chem_comp_chir.id
> _chem_comp_chir.atom_id_centre
> _chem_comp_chir.atom_id_1
> _chem_comp_chir.atom_id_2
> _chem_comp_chir.atom_id_3
> _chem_comp_chir.volume_sign
>   ALA      chir_01  CA     N      CB     C         negativ
> 
> Assigning "a" as the centre atom and atoms "b-d" as numbers 1-3, when  
> I apply the rule from the refmac page I get a positive chiral volume,  
> not the negative one found in the cif file. Ditto for every other  
> example that I have tried.
> 
> Am I mis-reading what is meant by "above" and "below"?  I'm assuming  
> that if atoms b, c, and d all lie in a vertical plane, and you are  
> facing that plane, then "below" means on the far side of that plane  
> and "above" means between you and the plane.
> 
> When I use the definition V1 * (V2 x V3), where V1 is vector FROM  
> chiral atom to 1st substituent (e.g., CA to N in alanine example  
> above), V2 = vector from chiral atom to 2nd substituent, etc., then I  
> get the expected sign for the chiral volume.
> 
> So is the refmac page wrong, or am I falling prey to some roaringly  
> obvious stupidity?
> 
> Having a rough Monday--starting to question my sanity.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Pat
> 
> ps It appears that the term "_chem_comp_chir.volume_sign" is not  
> defined in either the core or mmCIF dictionaries. Can this be right?
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> -----------
> Patrick J. Loll, Ph. D.
> Professor of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
> Director, Biochemistry Graduate Program
> Drexel University College of Medicine
> Room 10-102 New College Building
> 245 N. 15th St., Mailstop 497
> Philadelphia, PA  19102-1192  USA
> 
> (215) 762-7706
> pat.l...@drexelmed.edu
> 

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