Hi Eleanor and others:

This is a little too late to follow up on this thread.  But here is a
similar question concerning MR and self-rotation.

Without going into the translational part of MR, is it possible to tell
the orientation of a 2-fold axis directly from the cross-rotation peaks?
e.g. I have 2 top peaks from the cross-rotation function.  There is also a
strong 2-fold axis shown in self-rotation (kappa=180).   Persumbaly then
the two cross-rotation peaks are related by this 2-fold axis.   From the
angles of the two cross-rotation peaks, can I already tell the direction
of the 2-fold axis?

Regards,

Weikai

> ÍúÍú wrote:
>
>> I calculated the self-rotation function matrix with POLARRFN (named
>> 1), and also got the molecular replacement solution with phaser, and
>> used CNS's get_ncs_matrices to acquire the NCS matrix (named 2).
>> Now what I wanted to do is to compare the results of 1 and 2. Are they
>> the same or not, or which self-rotation function matrix is the right
>> one of true NCS. Could you give me some suggestions?
>> By the way, if I have got one molecule's PDB, and the rotation
>> function matrix, are there any softwares on acquiring the other
>> molecule's PDB? Many thanks
>
>
>
> POLARRFN will give you ALL symmetry equivalent rotations for your point
> group.
>
> Only one of these will relate your molecule A to B, and its inverse
> should relate B to A. Both will be listed in the POLARRFN output, plus
> probably many others depending on your point group..
>
> I do not know the CNS convention now but it certainly used to be
> different from the CCP4 one.
>
> Hwever if you use he GUI
> cordinarte utilities
> superpose molecules
>
> select superpose by numbered residues
>
> then match A to B the log file will give you the ALPHA BETA GAMMA and
> the polar angles nt e same convention as POLARRFN.
>
> Eleanor
>
>

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