Hi folks

The real answer (before I ask the question) is, of course, to use mmCIF. But 
quite a few programs out there don’t read mmCIF files properly (if at all), so 
I’ll ask the question anyway.

The venerable PDB format allows 3 columns (18-20) for the residue or ligand 
name, and this was fine as long as there were only chemical components allowed 
with 3 characters - but now there are loads that have 5 characters (e.g. A1B20 
- see  https://www.ebi.ac.uk/pdbe-srv/pdbechem/chemicalCompound/show/A1B20).

If I wanted to write a PDB format file for the ligand that had the 5-character 
code, what would be the “best” way to do it (of course, there are different 
definitions of “best”…)?

What dirty trick would cause the least damage (at least, to common programs)?

Allowing the ligand name to spread over columns 16-20 *might* work, but that 
would mean encroaching on the atom name column, and might cause confusion 
between things like calcium (“CA “) and carbons labelled with an “A” (“ CA”).

Thoughts?

Harry
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