The maps look beautiful, but maybe the high resolution data is refining
poorly.
Not sure how to do this with phenix or SHELX but REFMAC gives you a plot of
<Fobs> and <Fcalc> v resolution. You sometimes see wild divergence in some
resolution shells.
Looking at Rfactors v resolution can also highlight such problems.

Eleanor


On Mon, 3 Feb 2020 at 11:08, Barone, Matthias <bar...@fmp-berlin.de> wrote:

> Dear ccp4 community
>
> Im having some problems solving a 0.73A structure. Spacegroup seems to be
> correct, data are not twinned, 95.5% overall completeness, ISa 25.6. Outer
> shell CC1/2 24% and 90.4% complete.
>
> The model is nearly fully built, there is no remaining unmodelled areas.
> However, Rfact is stuck 27% in phenix, with a very distinct artifact in
> the electron map (see phenix.jpg). You can see difference density on
> various well defined sidechain atoms. Notably, they seem to follow a
> pattern: Nearly all Val CG have difference signal, as well as many backbone
> NH. Hence, I suspected that it might be a problem with the SF, since we
> recorded the DS at 0.86A.
>
>
> Hence I gave shelxl a shot:
>
> I used the refined model from phenix, converted it via pdb2ins and pasted
> the restraints created by prodrg.
>
> The shelxl hkl was produced by xdsconv, using the freeR flagging of the
> mtz used by phenix (no merge, friedel false).
>
> Interestingly, shelxl can bring Rfree down to 16% and almost all of
> the diff-density artifacts seen before are gone (shelxl_noSFAC-CL.jpg).
> Except one: the inhibitor contains a chlorinated phenylring (pdb ligand
> 2L5) which now shows massive difference density for Cl.
>
> I therefore suggested that I might deal with a wrong SF for Cl. Funny
> enough, pdb2ins does not produce a DISP line for Cl if converting the pdb
> that contains the inhibitor. Hence, I used pdb2ins and the pdb from
> PRODRG to produce SFAC for the inhibitor Cloride. I then pasted this line
>
> DISP $CL    0.18845    0.21747   1035.16450
>
> into the .res file and updated the UNIT line. Shelxl runs through, and
> the density looks ok on the Chloride now. However Rfree is back up at 24%
> and the artifacts seen by phenix.refine are back (shelxl_SFAC-CL.jpg):
> now, very distincitvly, backbone carbonyls and NHs show difference density.
>
> Am I right in my assumption, that the SFAC of Cloride is not properly
> calculated at the given wavelenght? And if so, how do I guess it correctly?
>
>
> Thank you very much for your help!
>
> Best, matthias
>
>
>
>
> Dr. Matthias Barone
>
> AG Kuehne, Rational Drug Design
>
> Leibniz-Forschungsinstitut für Molekulare Pharmakologie (FMP)
> Robert-Rössle-Strasse 10
> 13125 Berlin
>
> Germany
> Phone: +49 (0)30 94793-284
>
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