Hi,

I'm just catching up on the BB after the CCP4 Study Weekend!

Going back to the beginning of this thread, it's true that tNCS and twinning 
have opposite effects on the intensity moments, which can mask each other.  
However, for simple cases (as this one appears to be) with a single NCS 
translation, the tNCS analysis in Phaser seems to be pretty successful at 
deconvoluting those effects.  It would be interesting to see the overall second 
moments and the second moments as a function of resolution from a run in 
Phaser, either in NCS mode or in MR_AUTO mode.

In such a case, once the tNCS is properly characterised, Phaser places 
molecules in pairs (or higher multiples in more complex cases of higher-order 
tNCS).  That should deal automatically with cases like the ones Phoebe 
mentions, where you could temporarily reduce the cell by a factor of two, but 
it works more generally when the tNCS doesn't correspond to a cell doubling.  
We'd appreciate hearing about any cases where reindexing in a smaller cell 
works and Phaser's automated treatment didn't!  Or, indeed, about cases like 
the one Ethan mentioned where turning off the automatic tNCS correction helped. 
 (I've already been in touch with Ethan off-line.)

As Jacob and others have mentioned, you will always get lower R-factors once 
you treat the data as being twinned, and the more twin operators the bigger the 
reduction in R-factors.  So you need very strong evidence, independent of 
R-factors, to invoke twinning.  In this case, the L-test should be reasonably 
trustworthy even in the presence of tNCS, and your L-test values are close to 
what one would expect for an untwinned crystal.  At most you have partial 
twinning, or perhaps twinning of a pseudo-symmetric crystal (a possibility Phil 
mentioned), where the effects on intensity statistics are reduced.

One way to address a problem like this is to solve the structure in a lower 
symmetry space group (as you have done), but then to check whether the MR 
solution actually obeys the higher symmetry.  You can do this by looking at the 
crystal packing or at merging statistics for Fcalcs after a refinement with 
highly restrained NCS.  A similar sort of analysis is automated in the Zanuda 
tool in CCP4.

Dealing with potential complications from combinations of twinning and 
pseudosymmetry is one of the more challenging aspects of crystallography, but 
it's a good learning experience.  Good luck!

Randy Read

> On 10 Jan 2019, at 22:38, Donghyuk Shin <sdh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Dear all,
> 
> Thank you very much for all of your suggestions and sharing experiences.
> As many of you commented, the current small unit cell C2 refinement seems to 
> be incorrect or correct, and I should put some efforts to crack this question.
> 
> - To Phill Jeffrey, 
> The idea, trying to find high symmetry SG with small unit cell C2 data is 
> good idea, and I will try this.
> For your last comments, identifiable electron density differences between 
> each chain, 
> I guess there should not be other densities between chains if my current SG 
> and model is correct. Am I right?
> 
> - To Ethan,
> Turning off the automatic_tNCS_option seems to be good option.
> I think, my current data seems to be twinned then tNCS which I am not sure at 
> this moment. But I will keep your advice in my mind.
> 
> - To Phoebe A. Rice,
> It is quite interesting that you also could get structure solution by 
> indexing strong spots and having smaller unit cell.
> Actually, I was wondering how it was possible that having half-sized unit 
> cell could have solution, while full-sized unit cell could not.
> It will be great if you can share your experience a bit more (e.g the size of 
> smaller unit cell used in initial search for both 1szp and 3pkz)
> 
> Again, thank you very much for all of your suggestion.
> 
> Best wishes,
> Donghyuk
> 
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------
Randy J. Read
Department of Haematology, University of Cambridge
Cambridge Institute for Medical Research      Tel: + 44 1223 336500
Wellcome Trust/MRC Building                   Fax: + 44 1223 336827
Hills Road                                    E-mail: rj...@cam.ac.uk
Cambridge CB2 0XY, U.K.                       www-structmed.cimr.cam.ac.uk

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