Dear All,

If I have a set of PDB with the corresponding density map, after I transform 
the PDB based on the suggestion of everybody, is any way to transform the map 
so that the map will be fit with the transformed PDB?


Smith







At 2017-12-18 18:39:34, "Eleanor Dodson" 
<0000176a9d5ebad7-dmarc-requ...@jiscmail.ac.uk> wrote:

I showed you pdbset ..

Find the centre of mass for your assembly.

Move it where you will


pdbset xyzin mow.pdb

end

Find  CoM 0.7 1.3 -0.2


Hmm - a little thought - centre at 1 -1 0   say


pdbset yzin now.pdb xyzout changed.pdb


symgen x , y-2, z 


end


New CoM  0.7 -0.7  -0.2


Eleanor









On 18 December 2017 at 00:19, Edward A. Berry <ber...@upstate.edu> wrote:
Neat idea!
And do you have a 1-line command for setting all the coordinates to 1,1,1? or 
0.1,0.1,0.1 if I still want it near the origin but biased toward the inside of 
the positive-going cell?
eab


On 12/14/2017 07:23 PM, James Holton wrote:
What I usually do for this is make a copy of the PDB file and change all the 
atom x-y-z positions to "1.000".  Then I use something like reforigin or my 
"origins.com" script to shift the original coordinates via allowed symmetry 
operations, origin shifts, or perhaps indexing ambiguities until it is as close 
as possible to the "reference", which is at 1,1,1.  I use 1,1,1 instead of 
0,0,0 because there are generally at least two symmetry-equivalent places that 
are equidistant from the origin. Declaring the reference to be a bit off-center 
breaks that ambiguity, and also biases the result toward having all-positive 
x,y,z values.


In case it is interesting, my script is here:

http://bl831.als.lbl.gov/~jamesh/scripts/origins.com


You need to have the CCP4 suite set up for it to work.  Run it with no 
arguments to get instructions.


-James Holton

MAD Scientist


On 12/13/2017 5:50 AM, Kajander, Tommi A wrote:

Hello,

If someone could point this out would be very helpful... Wasnt there a simple 
script somewhere that would transfer coordinates close to origin - if they for 
some reason are not? Just cant find anything right away. Sure i have done this 
before...


Thanks,

Tommi





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