For those of you who want to attempt multi-copy problems with Phaser...

Most of the work on Phaser over the last year has gone into improving results for multi-copy problems, to increase the signal-to-noise of the searches and reduce the computation time (more solutions for less cpu).

The biggest change is the addition of a likelihood treatment of translational NCS, which is common for multi-copy problems. However, there are also changes to the search algorithm and packing function that make a large impact. For example, the packing function was performing poorly when there were 20 copies in the asymmetric unit because if 19 were placed and not overlapped then the placement of the 20th molecule could result in total overlap, because 5% of the total number of residues was allowed in clashes but 5% of the residues was one whole molecule. So there was, in effect, no packing test just when the packing test should have been providing good discrimination. This has been fixed,

Phaser-2.5.0 (nightly builds) has these additional features to help in multi-copy cases: Packing function changes as mentioned above; Translational NCS correction; TNCS/twin detection; Search ensembles that are multimers with pointgroup symmetry can be placed on crystallographic symmetry axes without triggering packing clashes; Search algorithm can amalgamate multiple copies found in one translation function (prevents unneccessary branching); Space group not determined by placement of first ensemble, but carried through until solution is found; Refinement of overall B-factor for each placed copy (can vary widely for different copies in the ASU); Refinement of ensemble variance when signal-to-noise is low (true for placement of first few copies in multi-copy problems),

Phaser Tip #1: Search for all the copies you think are present in the ASU in one go.

Phaser Tip #2: If you find e.g. 15 in one run, you can re-start Phaser from this point using the .sol file to look for more.

Phaser Tip #3: Remember to use the appropriate composition for the number you think are present in any given run (not necessarily the same as the number you are searching for).

Since this code is in active development, at the moment we are particularly interested in multi-copy cases that don't solve.

Airlie

On 04/30/12 11:41, Ke, Jiyuan wrote:

Dear All,****

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I have a question regarding solving a crystal structure by molecular replacement. It is a single protein with a molecular weight of 25.5 kDa. The cell dimension is rather big from the diffraction data ( 90.9 Å, 143.9 Å, 216.3Å, 90°, 90°, 90°). The possible space group is P212121. With such a big unit cell, we predicted that there are 8-10 molecules per asymmetric unit. We have a decent model with sequence similarity of 49%. I tried several times with Phaser search with the current model and had difficulty to find any clear solution. Has anyone seen such cases and any suggestions to solve the structure? Thanks!****

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