Hi Oliver,

Use CHIMERA- http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/chimera/

There are video tutorials for docking- 
http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/chimera/videodoc/videodoc.html

This is a very good package.

While I have used Situs colores, I find this package more versatile and useful. 
You can also use Pymol (but I think thats not free any more??). 

Best 




Dr. Anindito Sen (Ph.D)
Structural Biology
Graduate School of Medicine
University of Tokyo
7-3-1 Hongo. Bunkyo-ku. Tokyo
113-0033. Japan
Tel & Fax: +81-3-5841-3339

On Sep 20, 2013, at 7:09 PM, Randy Read wrote:

> When we have needed to do something like this, the following procedure has 
> worked pretty well for us:
> 
> 1. Define the volume containing the density into which a model should be 
> docked (most easily as atoms in a PDB file specifying the centres of 
> spheres), then get structure factors corresponding to cut-out density (using 
> cmapcut in CCP4 or phenix.cut_out_density in Phenix).
> 
> 2. Do a rotation search in Phaser, treating the structure factors from the 
> cut-out density as observed data.
> 
> 3. Use the phased translation function (program fft in CCP4) to place the 
> oriented model(s) in the cut-out density.
> 
> With the availability of cmapcut and phenix.cut_out_density, this is much 
> easier than it used to be, but we've still been intending to streamline this 
> process; this is on our very long to-do list.
> 
> In principle, FFFEAR ought to work for any problem where this works, but I 
> haven't had much luck -- probably I've been doing something wrong!
> 
> The next time I have a problem like this, I'll have to try Situs colores, 
> which I hadn't heard about until this discussion.
> 
> Best wishes,
> 
> Randy Read
> 
> On 19 Sep 2013, at 16:03, Pete Meyer <pame...@mcw.edu> wrote:
> 
>> Another vote for Situs colores - we've had very good luck with using it to 
>> dock domain structures into low resolution multi-crystal SAD maps.
>> 
>> Pete
>> 
>> Oliver Clarke wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>>> Can anyone recommend software to dock previously solved domains into a 
>>> (very) low-resolution experimentally phased map?
>>> I am working on a rather marginal case where this would be useful - very 
>>> large assembly (500kDA per ASU), native goes to 6.9A, and the best 
>>> derivative goes to 8A with SAD phases from a heavy atom cluster to 11. 
>>> Unfortunately no NCS is present.
>>> The map is (for the resolution!) not too bad - the solvent boundary is 
>>> clear after SHELXE, and I can manually place a previously solved structure 
>>> and get a reasonably convincing fit (and the fit I obtain agrees with that 
>>> previously determined using CryoEM by another group). There are a couple of 
>>> other domains that I would like to place, and I believe I have some idea of 
>>> where they are, but manual fitting is somewhat subjective, so I'd like an 
>>> automated routine for doing the same - something like the functionality 
>>> that ADP_EM provides when working with CryoEM maps. Does something like 
>>> this exist? I tried using ADP_EM but it gives a segfault when used with a 
>>> crystallographic density map.
>>> I have tried using MOLREP to look for the model in the map to no avail, and 
>>> PHASER didn't work either.
>>> On another note, if anyone has any tips for density modification/phase 
>>> extension in this resolution range I would love to hear them - haven't had 
>>> a whole lot of luck with PARROT, DM, or SOLOMON, the maps seem stuck at 
>>> ~10A despite data going to 8. I tried using SHARP with the SPHCLUSTER tag 
>>> on, but it gave no improvement over what I obtain treating the cluster as a 
>>> super atom in SHELXD.
>>> Many thanks in advance!
>>> Oliver.
> 
> ------
> Randy J. Read
> Department of Haematology, University of Cambridge
> Cambridge Institute for Medical Research      Tel: + 44 1223 336500
> Wellcome Trust/MRC Building                   Fax: + 44 1223 336827
> Hills Road                                    E-mail: rj...@cam.ac.uk
> Cambridge CB2 0XY, U.K.                       www-structmed.cimr.cam.ac.uk

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