I have heard many times that it is a black eye to refine in a lower-symmetry 
spacegroup, but I could never really understand why. The higher symmetry could 
be considered merely a helpful theoretical lens to improve signal-to-noise, and 
therefore imposing higher symmetry on the data could be seen as a sort of 
*leniency* of scientific (or at least empiric) rigor. I think similarly about 
using discrete spot intensities rather than the whole image--we assume Bragg 
conditions and neglect certain things about the image between the spots, which 
is usually valid, but not always. I wonder why it is considered maladroit to 
refine in a lower spacegroup, then--don't higher spacegroup impose more 
assumptions than p1?

Jacob Keller

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: James Holton 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, October 21, 2010 10:55 AM
  Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] Regarding space group P1, P21



  You pick the Rfree flags in the high-symmetry space group, and then use "CAD" 
with "OUTLIM SPACE P1" to symmetry-expand them to P1 (or whatever you like).

  Things get trickier, however, when your NCS is close to, (bot not exactly) 
crystallographic (NECS?).  Or if you are simply not sure.  The best way I can 
think of to deal with this situation is to "road test" your Rfree:
  1) do something that you know is "wrong", like delete a helix, or put some 
side chains in the wrong place
  2) refine with NCS turned on
  3) check that Rfree actually goes up
  4) un-do the "wrong" things
  5) refine again
  6) check that Rfree actually goes down
  7) try again with NCS turned off

  Remembering these timeless words of wisdom: "Control, Control, you must learn 
CONTROL!" -Yoda (Jedi Master)

  -James Holton
  MAD Scientist

  On 10/21/2010 8:46 AM, Christina Bourne wrote: 
    Dear all,
    How would one properly select reflections for R-free in these situations?  
Presumably if the selection is done in P1 then it mimics twinning or high NCS, 
such that reflections in both the work and free set will be (potentially?) 
related by symmetry.
    -Christina




----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    From: Mohinder Pal <[email protected]>
    To: [email protected]
    Sent: Thu, October 21, 2010 7:05:42 AM
    Subject: [ccp4bb] Regarding space group P1, P21

    Dear CCP4BB members,

    I have solved a protein-drug complex structure in P21212 space group.  In 
this structure, the drug molecule is  falling on the two-fold symmetry axis 
having averaged electron density  with 0.5 occupancy. We tried a lot to 
crystallize this protein-drug complex in different space group but no success 
so far.  I have tried to solve the same data  in space group P1 (statistics are 
fine as I have collected data for 360 degree). The map looks even better with 
one conformation for a drug. Interestingly, then I reprocessed the same data 
using imosflm in P21 space group which have penalty 1 compared to 4 for P21212. 
 The structure in P21 is  also refining well (with one conformation of the drug 
compound without symmetry axis at the ligand position). The question is , is it 
a good practice to solve this structure in P1 and P21 even if the data has 
higher symmetry?

    Secondly, I have been advised that I have to be careful to refine structure 
in P1 as there will be problem regarding observation/parameter ratio if I add 
too many water molecules. What will be the case if the electron density present 
 for water molecules?  

    I can put restrains to protein structure  but  I am just curious to know 
one restrain equals how many observations.

    I look forward to hear your suggestions.

    Kind regards,

    Mohinder Pal








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Jacob Pearson Keller
Northwestern University
Medical Scientist Training Program
Dallos Laboratory
F. Searle 1-240
2240 Campus Drive
Evanston IL 60208
lab: 847.491.2438
cel: 773.608.9185
email: [email protected]
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