Dear Bernhard,

I think, the main difference of an unmodelled part between the mask bulk solvent correction and the Babinet bulk solvent correction is, that the mask approach can use quite detailed structural information, whereas the Babinet approach uses only two additional scale factors. Let's illustrate this for a model with an unmodelled part:

In the mask bulk solvent correction, the solvent mask fills the region outside the modelled part and thus lowers the local contrast of the unmodelled part. For the unmodelled part, it would be better if there wouldn't be any bulk solvent density (BUSTER allows this). Then, the superior scaling of the mask bulk solvent approach without reducing the local contrast should really help with the interpretation of the unmodelled part. However, masking out the unmodelled part shouldn't be too detailed, since the hole left in the bulk solvent mask will return as positive difference density and can be heavily biased towards the atoms that were used to exclude the solvent mask. I've seen this in the very old X-Plor, where setting the occupany to "0" of a part of the model took it out from the model's Fcalc but not from the solvent mask calculation, leading to positive difference density exactly around the "omitted" atoms + mask radius.

Something like this could not happen with the Babinet approach, since it only affects overall scale factors. But here, the effect is quite counter-intuitive! If the unmodelled part is well ordered (but just missing), it's contribution will be missing from the model's Fcalc at all resolutions and thus will affect the overall scale factor of the model Fcalc, only, but not the additional Babinet scale factors. If the missing atoms are not accounted for in the overall scaling, this could decrease, or underestimate, the signal of the difference density everywhere, which is a general problem, but not specifically related to the Babinet solvent correction. If, however, the unmodelled part is less well ordered (which is the more common case), it's contribution will mainly affect the model's Fcalc at low resolution. If the overall scaling is dominated by the high resolution terms (which is usually the case), the unmodelled part will not have an effect on the overall scale factor of the model's Fcalc, leaving only the Fcalc at low resolution somewhat too low. Since lowering the model's Fcalc scale factor at low resolution is the main purpose of the Babinet solvent correction, this will lead to an _underestimation_ (!) of the Babinet bulk solvent contribution scale factor (ksol). This, in principle, should increase, or overestimate, the signal of the difference densities at low resolution, which might also help with interpretation of the unmodelled part.

But all these scaling effects should be small, unless a substantial part of the model is missing.

Best regards,

Dirk.

On 12.01.2015 11:09, Bernhard Rupp wrote:

What still evades me is, why exactly is the Babinet immune to these effects of excluding/masking-out unmodelled parts?

The Babinet correction is also a function of the MODELLED part, just the opposite sign. So an incomplete model

de facto equals an over-estimated solvent. Is it just the high effective dampening of this correction (B ~200) as

Pavel said that makes it less susceptible because the higher resolution reflections are less affected and

therefore have a chance to correct/overcome the inadequate (implicit) masking?

Best, BR

*From:*CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] *On Behalf Of *Eleanor Dodson
*Sent:* Sonntag, 11. Januar 2015 17:05
*To:* CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
*Subject:* Re: [ccp4bb] Bulk solvent

Yes. If the model is incomplete it is obviously not sensible to use the mask based solvent - you will tend to lose the unmodelled features. It also gives unrealistically low R factors for a crystal with high solvent content. However the best test would be to analyse maps and try to decide if & when the different procedures work best.. A project for a student dissertation perhaps??

  Eleanor

On 9 January 2015 at 20:13, Roberts, Sue A - (suer) <s...@email.arizona.edu <mailto:s...@email.arizona.edu>> wrote:

I always try both methods - usually there is little difference.  However,

For CueO (multicopper oxidase) where there are about 25 disordered (unseen) residues in a loop, using Babinet scaling instead of the default refmac scaling reduced the R factors by about 2% (both R and Rfree) and improved the quality of the maps substantially.

From Dirk's comment, I'd guess this is because the mask-based solvent model is putting solvent where there is (disordered) protein, which is different from real bulk solvent.

Sue

Dr. Sue A. Roberts
Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry
University of Arizona
1306 E. University Blvd,  Tucson, AZ 85721
Phone: 520 621 4168 <tel:520%20621%204168>
s...@email.arizona.edu <mailto:s...@email.arizona.edu>




-----Original Message-----
From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK <mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>] On Behalf Of Armando Albert
Sent: Friday, January 09, 2015 12:56 AM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK <mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
Subject: [ccp4bb] Bulk solvent

Dear all,
Is there any reason for using Babinet scaling for bulk solvent correction instead of mask based scaling?
Armando


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