Hi Pavel,many thanks, and great guess - there is indeed a TER between two conformers. I imagine deleting this will solve my problem. As for my second question, probably I would need to do something along the lines of example #4 in your link and define a constrained_group?Thanks!Ben2014-06-14 21:36 GMT+02:00 Pavel Afonine <pafonine@lbl.gov>:
Hi Ben,I'm pretty sure the problem stems from incorrectly formatted PDB file (perhaps TER records inserted between conformations/residue, etc..). If you send me PDB file or just a fraction of it with residues/ligands in question I will tell what exactly is the root of the problem.
I do a refinement of a glycoprotein that has a NAG-NAG attached to an Asn. The data set is very high resolution and I am positive there is indication of a secondary conformation of the entire attachement.
I modeled a second conformation in Coot and run my refinement, with the "adjust occupancy" option checked. After initially setting both occupancies to 0.5, I am puzzled to see one of the NAGs to be refined to 0.45 (conformer A) and 0.75 (conformer B) occupancy .. For the other NAG, and indeed all amino acid residues, things always add up like they should.
Additionally to this, I was wondering if there was an easy option to restrain each conformer of the entire Asn-NAG-NAG group to have uniform occupancies -- i.e. the Asn and both NAGs of conformer A to have identical occupancy.
More information about how phenix.refine does occupancy refinement:
http://phenix-online.org/documentation/reference/refinement.html#occupancy-refinement
Pavel