Hi,
I am assuming the enzyme is not active, or by substrate you do not mean the
actual substrate, may be an analogue. The substrate might be converted into
product and the leave through the channel and you will not find anything
bound to it. But I think you have taken care of that.



On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 7:00 AM, Ed Pozharski <epozh...@umaryland.edu> wrote:

> It is also possible that mother liquor prevents binding (although often
> in such cases you would see some precipitant component in the active
> site.
>
> I would generally bet on need for conformational change.  And you expect
> to see the product complex, right?
>
> Ed.
>
> On Fri, 2010-04-09 at 11:15 +0200, Paul Lindblom wrote:
> > Dear Bulletin Board,
> >
> > I am trying to soak substrate into crystals of an enzyme, but so far I
> > can't see the substrate in the structure. Does anyone knows a program
> > to ensure that the entrance to the central cavity is accessibly? I
> > mean based on the whole crystal. I already checked the crystal packing
> > manually and it seems that the way is free more or less, but I find it
> > hard to interpret.
> >
> > Thanks in advance,
> >
> > P.
>
>
> --
> Edwin Pozharski, PhD, Assistant Professor
> University of Maryland, Baltimore
> ----------------------------------------------
> When the Way is forgotten duty and justice appear;
> Then knowledge and wisdom are born along with hypocrisy.
> When harmonious relationships dissolve then respect and devotion arise;
> When a nation falls to chaos then loyalty and patriotism are born.
> ------------------------------   / Lao Tse /
>

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