| Literature DB >> 24189236 |
Thomas C Terwilliger1, Randy J Read, Paul D Adams, Axel T Brunger, Pavel V Afonine, Li-Wei Hung.
Abstract
A procedure termed `morphing' for improving a model after it has been placed in the crystallographic cell by molecular replacement has recently been developed. Morphing consists of applying a smooth deformation to a model to make it match an electron-density map more closely. Morphing does not change the identities of the residues in the chain, only their coordinates. Consequently, if the true structure differs from the working model by containing different residues, these differences cannot be corrected by morphing. Here, a procedure that helps to address this limitation is described. The goal of the procedure is to obtain a relatively complete model that has accurate main-chain atomic positions and residues that are correctly assigned to the sequence. Residues in a morphed model that do not match the electron-density map are removed. Each segment of the resulting trimmed morphed model is then assigned to the sequence of the molecule using information about the connectivity of the chains from the working model and from connections that can be identified from the electron-density map. The procedure was tested by application to a recently determined structure at a resolution of 3.2 Å and was found to increase the number of correctly identified residues in this structure from the 88 obtained using phenix.resolve sequence assignment alone (Terwilliger, 2003) to 247 of a possible 359. Additionally, the procedure was tested by application to a series of templates with sequence identities to a target structure ranging between 7 and 36%. The mean fraction of correctly identified residues in these cases was increased from 33% using phenix.resolve sequence assignment to 47% using the current procedure. The procedure is simple to apply and is available in the Phenix software package.Entities:
Keywords: loop-building; model building; model–map correlation; morphing; sequence assignment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24189236 PMCID: PMC3817698 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444913017770
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449
Figure 1Schematic of morphing.
Figure 2Schematic of sequence assignment.
Figure 3(a) Template structure 1vgy (Badger et al., 2005 ▶; blue) superimposed on the final model of Cgl1109 (Brunger et al., 2012 ▶; yellow). (b) As in (a) but with the morphed model of 1vgy (purple). (c) Morphed model (purple) based on 1vgy, the final structure (yellow) and the phenix.autobuild density-modified electron-density map obtained from the morphed model. The map was corrected for anisotropy and sharpening to an effective B factor of 32 Å2. (d) Trimmed morphed model (purple) obtained from the map and model in (c); the structure of Cgl1109 is shown in yellow. All maps are contoured at 1.5σ and all figures were prepared with Coot (Emsley et al., 2010 ▶).
Figure 4(a) The morphed trimmed model as shown in Fig. 3 ▶(d) is colored to indicate the segments that were correctly assigned to sequence (green) and those that were not assigned to sequence (blue) using phenix.resolve sequence assignment (Terwilliger, 2003 ▶). (b) Sequence assignment and loop building for the morphed trimmed model using phenix.assign_sequence, including information on loops that can be built connecting ends of the model and not allowing overlapping sequences. Coloring is as in (a), with segments that are incorrectly assigned in red. (c) Sequence assignment as in (b), requiring that the order of the segments in the model match that in the template. (d) As in (c), but iterating the assignment process. (e) As in (d), but superimposed on the final model of Cgl1109 (yellow).
Figure 5Sequence assignment of a series of templates with and without inclusion of information on connectivity of the template (see text for details). The fraction of residues assigned correctly for the structure 1a2b obtained using each template is shown. The open triangles reflect assignments using only phenix.resolve sequence assignment based on the match of the side-chain density to the map and the filled squares reflect assignments including the full procedure described here.