Hmm - that sym op means you  have a near C centred cell with spacegroup C 2
2 2 ?

Maybe some of your protein has been chewed up? That does happen?

How good is the diffraction?

Eleanor

On Sat, 1 Jun 2019 at 17:44, Jonathan Cooper <
00000c2488af9525-dmarc-requ...@jiscmail.ac.uk> wrote:

> Does the SAXS model contain more than one subunit? If so, I would be
> tempted to go back to the model and try each one separately. This may not
> apply, but if there are monomers in the SAXS model that are related by
> space group symmetry in the crystal, I think the MR would never work. Good
> luck with it! Bests, Jon. Cooper
>
> Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
> <https://go.onelink.me/107872968?pid=InProduct&c=Global_Internal_YGrowth_AndroidEmailSig__AndroidUsers&af_wl=ym&af_sub1=Internal&af_sub2=Global_YGrowth&af_sub3=EmailSignature>
>
> On Sat, 1 Jun 2019 at 9:45, Jrh Gmail
> <jrhelliw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear Kevin
> You could try reindexing into P1, then run Phaser and with its solution as
> input to Zanuda determine the space group.
> Best wishes,
> John
>
> Emeritus Professor of Chemistry John R Helliwell DSc_Physics
>
>
>
>
> On 31 May 2019, at 21:09, Kevin Jude <kj...@stanford.edu> wrote:
>
> Hello community, I wonder if I could solicit advice about a problematic
> dataset. I plan to solve the structure by molecular replacement and expect
> that the protein is relatively compact, ie not elongated. SAXS data
> supports this expectation.
>
> The crystals diffract to 2.6 Å resolution and appear to be in P 21 21 2
> with a = 49, b = 67, c = 94, which should fit <=2 molecules in the ASU with
> 40% solvent. The native Patterson shows a large peak (12 sigma) suggesting
> a tNCS vector of {0.5, 0.5, 0}.
>
> If you're sharper than me, you may have already spotted the problem - c is
> the long axis of the unit cell, but tNCS constrains the proteins to a plane
> parallel to the a,b plane. Indeed, molecular replacement attempts using
> Phaser will not give a solution in any orthorhombic space group unless I
> turn off packing, and then I get large overlaps in the a,b plane and huge
> gaps along c.
>
> Since I believe that my model is good (or at least the correct shape,
> based on SAXS), I wonder if I'm misinterpreting my crystallographic data.
> Any insights into how to approach this problem would be much appreciated.
>
> --
> Kevin Jude, PhD
> Structural Biology Research Specialist, Garcia Lab
> Howard Hughes Medical Institute
> Stanford University School of Medicine
> Beckman B177, 279 Campus Drive, Stanford CA 94305
> Phone: (650) 723-6431
>
>
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