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Dear Scott,

if there were only two different molecules in solution rather than
random combinations of the differing 5%, I don't see a problem in
putting molecule 1 into part A and molecule 2 in part B (or the
respective parts only). This should be unrelated to insertion code.

Best,
Tim

On 11/07/2013 12:27 AM, Scott Classen wrote:
> Hello COOTers,
> 
> A colleague (not on the coot mailing list… shame on him) has a
> problem. His heterodimer is composed of alpha and beta subunits
> that are 95% identical, and because of his chosen space group, end
> up packing in the crystal lattice such that some residue positions
> (the 5% that are not identical and that are sufficiently well
> ordered to see differences) have mixtures of two different amino
> acids at the same position. How should he deal with this in coot?
> 
> Thanks, Scott
> 
> 
> 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Scott Classen, Ph.D. SIBYLS
> Beamline 12.3.1 sibyls.als.lbl.gov Advanced Light Source Lawrence
> Berkeley National Laboratory 1 Cyclotron Rd MS6R2100 Berkeley, CA
> 94720 cell 510.206.4418 desk 510.495.2697 beamline 510.495.2134 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> 

- -- 
Dr Tim Gruene
Institut fuer anorganische Chemie
Tammannstr. 4
D-37077 Goettingen

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