[phenixbb] twinning

Shun Liu sliu.xtal at gmail.com
Wed Apr 1 09:55:47 PDT 2015


Dear Randy, Peter, Jacob, and Tim,
Thank you all very much for your instructive suggestions and comments.

Best,

Shun
On Apr 1, 2015, at 8:48 AM, Randy Read <rjr27 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> It looks like only the second one indicates significant twinning.  For that one, the R-factor between twin-related reflections is very low while the estimated twinning fraction (by all three tests) is around 0.44, which is close enough to 0.5 that this might be a perfectly twinned crystal.  So you only want to specify the second twinning operator to phenix.refine, and you don't need to worry about the other two potential operators.  For these the R-factor between twin-related reflections is much larger and the estimated twin fractions are much lower.  It's possible there's some pseudosymmetry, which could give R-factors lower than random and estimated twin fractions a bit larger than 0.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Randy
> 
>> On 1 Apr 2015, at 16:33, Shun Liu <sliu.xtal at gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Dear Randy,
>> Below is the statistics depending on twin laws by Xtriage:
>> 
>> OPERATOR     TYPE       R OBS.           BRITTON ALPHA           H ALPHA           ML ALPHA
>> -h,-k,l       M         0.395                0.089                0.088             0.022
>> h,-h-k,-l     M         0.059                0.440                0.447             0.435
>> -k,-h,-l      M         0.404                0.082                0.087             0.022
>> 
>> The second one (h,-h-k,-l) gives a significant twin fraction, indicating an actual twin law (Am l right?). How about the other two? Low twin fraction or no twin? What is the criteria? Which operators should I choose for refinement? Only the second one? Thanks!
>> 
>> Best,
>> 
>> Shun
>> 
>> On Apr 1, 2015, at 12:38 AM, Randy Read <rjr27 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:
>> 
>>> Dear Shun,
>>> 
>>> There's one thing I'd like to clarify.  Xtriage will list possible twin operators (based on the symmetry of the crystal lattice), and then it will generate statistics to indicate what twin fraction is obtained when you test each of those possible twin operators.  So were these just the possible twin operators, or did all three of them give indications of significant twin fractions?  It's often the case that there is a possible twin operator, but the crystal isn't in fact twinned using that operator.
>>> 
>>> If you do indeed have multiple twin operators then, as Jacob mentioned, your only option at the moment would be Refmac5.
>>> 
>>> Best wishes,
>>> 
>>> Randy
>>> 
>>>> On 31 Mar 2015, at 17:47, Shun Liu <sliu.xtal at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Dear Randy,
>>>> Thank you so much for your suggestion. Phenix.xtriage indicated that there are 3 possible twin operators, (-h, -k, l; h, -h-k, -l; -k, -h, -l). When I provided twin law=-h,-k,l to phenix.refine (as it seemed that only one operator can be provided), I got lower R-factors than before. Now the question is that: should I provide all the three twin operators at the same time? And how? Thanks!
>>>> 
>>>> Best,
>>>> Shun
>>>> 
>>>> On Mar 31, 2015, at 3:26 AM, Randy Read <rjr27 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> Dear Shun,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Phaser does a test based on the moments of the intensity distribution, after correcting for anisotropy and (if present) translational non-crystallographic symmetry.  However, once a test like that has indicated that twinning is probably present, you will get a better result from running a program like phenix.xtriage, which will compare reflections related by possible twin operators and give a more precise idea of the twin fraction.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Since you’ve managed to get reasonable R-factors (even if they are higher than expected for 1.7A), the twin fraction is probably not too high.  The best thing to do now is probably to run phenix.xtriage to get a suggestion for what the twin operator is, then you can provide that twin operator to phenix.refine, which will then: a) refine the twin fraction to give a much more precise estimate; b) correct for twinning in the refinement.  Detwinning is not recommended any more, because it is better to refine against the original data.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Best wishes,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Randy Read
>>>>> 
>>>>> -----
>>>>> 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: rjr27 at cam.ac.uk
>>>>> Cambridge CB2 0XY, U.K.                               www-structmed.cimr.cam.ac.uk
>>>>> 
>>>>> On 31 Mar 2015, at 06:18, Shun Liu <sliu.xtal at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>>> Dear all,
>>>>>> Recently I have got a data set that diffracts to 1.7 angstrom. Images look good. During data processing I did not find anything that looks strange. However, when I was doing Phaser-MR, I got a  warning: “ Intensity moments suggest significant twinning (>5%). Tests based on possible twin laws will be more definitive.” What does this mean? A twinning data set? I still found a solution and refined the model step by step, using the data (20-1.7 angstrom). It seems that the final model and map are acceptable. But R-factors are 0.24/0.28, very high. Does the twin cause the high R-factors? Is there a solution to detwin? Or are the R-factors acceptable for a twinning data set? Any suggestions are appreciated and thanks in advance!
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Best,
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Shun
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> phenixbb mailing list
>>>>>> phenixbb at phenix-online.org
>>>>>> http://phenix-online.org/mailman/listinfo/phenixbb
>>>>>> Unsubscribe: phenixbb-leave at phenix-online.org
>>>>> 
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> ------
>>> 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: rjr27 at cam.ac.uk
>>> Cambridge CB2 0XY, U.K.                       www-structmed.cimr.cam.ac.uk
>>> 
>> 
> 
> ------
> 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: rjr27 at cam.ac.uk
> Cambridge CB2 0XY, U.K.                       www-structmed.cimr.cam.ac.uk
> 




More information about the phenixbb mailing list