Oops, sorry: "lsqman gives you the rmsd between pairs" not "moleman".
Additional comment: PDBSET should also give you the rmsd between B1 abd B2 
using the coordinates generated by lsqman.
Phil Philippe BENAS, Ph.D.
X-ray diffraction and computing facilities manager

Laboratoire de Cristallographie et RMN Biologiques, UMR 8015 CNRS
E-mails: philippe.be...@parisdescartes.fr, philippe_be...@yahoo.fr
URLs: http://lcrbw.pharmacie.univ-paris5.fr/ , 
http://lcrbw.pharmacie.univ-paris5.fr/spip.php?article18


      De : Philippe BENAS <philippe_be...@yahoo.fr>
 À : CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK 
 Envoyé le : Jeudi 26 février 2015 15h00
 Objet : Re: [ccp4bb] RMSD of dimers
   
Dear CCP4bbers,
If I remember correctly you can do this in LSQMAN (EXPLICIT superimposition 
command if I remember well): the superimposition is made between residues of 
chain A2 onto those of chain A1, then you apply the rotation/translation to all 
the A2B2 dimer and moleman gives you the rmsd between the two pairs of dimers. 
Alternatively, I think LSQMAN allows you to calculate the rmsd between B1 and 
B2 after having applied the transformation to the all dimer.Have a look on 
GJK-DVD pages at http://xray.bmc.uu.se/usf/ .

And finally isn't Coot doing this as well (using command lines) ? I think I did 
this once...

HTS,Philippe Philippe BENAS, Ph.D.
X-ray diffraction and computing facilities manager

Laboratoire de Cristallographie et RMN Biologiques, UMR 8015 CNRS
E-mails: philippe.be...@parisdescartes.fr, philippe_be...@yahoo.fr
URLs: http://lcrbw.pharmacie.univ-paris5.fr/ , 
http://lcrbw.pharmacie.univ-paris5.fr/spip.php?article18


      De : Eugene Krissinel <eugene.krissi...@stfc.ac.uk>
 À : CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK 
 Envoyé le : Jeudi 26 février 2015 14h17
 Objet : Re: [ccp4bb] RMSD of dimers
   


 No, the question seems to be slightly different. While one can use either 
CCP4's SSM or GESAMT to superpose 2 dimers, these algorithms would balance RMSD 
between both chains and produce something optimal for both chains. What is 
required, however, is optimal superposition on one pair of chains (one from 
each dimer) but measuring RMSD on the other pair of chains from same dimers. 
Nothing impossible in principle but no corresponding option in general-purpose 
aligners (this requires something like masks/selections for residues to 
superimpose and residues to measure the RMSD on). If this were a common and 
frequent problem, we could have it implemented in SSM/GESAMT.
 
 Eugene
 
 

On 26/02/2015 12:47, Eleanor Dodson wrote:
  
 
 Doesnt pisa give you some of this information? It lists all likely homodimers 
and I think gives RMSD too
  Eleanor
  
 On 24 February 2015 at 22:00, Thomas Holder <thomas.hol...@schrodinger.com> 
wrote:
 
Hi Dan,
 
 gaps/insertions should be no problem for PyMOL's rms_cur command, as long as 
chain identifiers match (and all other atomic identifiers!).
 
 See http://pymolwiki.org/index.php/Fit for a description of the matchmaker 
argument.
 
 Cheers,
   Thomas
  
 On 24 Feb 2015, at 16:30, D Bonsor <dbon...@ihv.umaryland.edu> wrote:
 
 > I have a family of homodimers (denoted A1B1, A2B2, A3B3...) which I have 
 > superimposed using Chain A. Several programs will produce the RMSD of Chain 
 > A2, A3, A4... to Chain A1. However, I would like to know the RMSDs of Chain 
 > B2, B3, B4... to Chain B1 when I have superimposed the structures relative 
 > to Chain A. I have tried using Pymol though there are gaps/insertions so 
 > rms/rms_cur will not work. Does anyone else have any other suggestions?
 >
 > Thanks in advance,
 >
 > Dan
 
   --
 Thomas Holder
 PyMOL Principal Developer
 Schrödinger, Inc.
 
  
  
 

   

  

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