Hi Rohit,

you might be interested in the following paper:

Buried chloride stereochemistry in the Protein Data Bank
BMC Structural Biology 2014, 14:19
doi:10.1186/s12900-014-0019-8
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6807/14/19

Best,

Oliviero



On Tue, January 20, 2015 10:53, Eleanor Dodson wrote:
> Also it just might be useful to do an anomalous Fourier - Cl has a weak
> signal, but may be visible if the phases are good. cf any peaks to ones
> over the S atoms to get a measure of what you might expect- Eleanor
>
>
>
> On 20 January 2015 at 07:17, Robbie Joosten <r.joos...@nki.nl> wrote:
>
>> Hi Rohit,
>>
>> The pictures you sent are not that informative. There are a few things
>> you
>> can use to distinguish chloride from water. Chloride prefers nitrogens
>> over
>> oxygens as ligands. Also the coordination lengths are higher than those
>> of
>> water, typically between 3 and 3.5Å. Usually, the coordination is not as
>> pretty as that of cations.
>>
>> HTH,
>> Robbie
>> ------------------------------
>> Van: rohit kumar <rohit...@gmail.com>
>> Verzonden: ‎20-‎1-‎2015 08:05
>> Aan: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
>> Onderwerp: [ccp4bb] chloride or water
>>
>>
>> Dear all,
>>
>> I am solving a data of 3.0 Å resolution. In the active site we found an
>> unidentified blob. The crystallization condition is (PEG 3350-25%,
>> Naformate-200mM, MES (100mM)-6.5pH, and Nacl-200mM).
>> Can anyone suggest what it could be? If I suppose that, it is chloride,
>> how could someone differentiate between a chloride moiety and water.
>> below I am showing the coot figure in two different orientations.
>>
>> Thanks in advance...
>>
>>
>> [image: Inline image 1]
>>
>>
>>
>> [image: Inline image 2]
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> WITH REGARDS
>> Rohit Kumar Singh
>> Lab. no. 430,
>> P.I. Dr. S. Gourinath,
>> School of Life Sciences,
>> Jawaharlal Nehru University
>> New Delhi -110067
>>
>

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