Also, I am interested if anyone knows of any publications that have included a real-space difference map?
Cheers,
Jordan
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From: Jordan Luke Pederick
Sent: Monday, 11 March 2019 1:25:57 PM
To: Eric Montemayor; Pavel Afonine; Philip Kiser; Tim Gruene; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [phenixbb] Fo-Fo difference map for non-isomorphous datasets
Thank you all for the prompt responses and suggestions.
My metal ion of interest is Cesium in this case, so I guess I am more interested in using this approach for visualization rather than peak identification - the strong density of Cs is fairly obvious
I have attached a few images of the superimposed (Fo, Phi) maps and resulting difference map using either Superpose maps in phenix or transform_map in coot following Tim's suggestions.
I also tried using maprot (CCP4) to apply the rotation/translation operator from the LSQ superpose but the resulting map was not superposed correctly (not sure why).
Both results seem kind of reasonable - I have shown one of the difference peaks for what is likely to be a bound Cs. For both approaches the peak was very obvious at a 3 sigma level, and could still be observed to around 10 sigma in both cases. I am still unsure about differences in scaling, so although strong positive peaks can be identified, I wouldn't be confident using the map to interpret smaller differences.
In response to Eric - I checked the anomalous signal, which was fairly weak. The resulting anomalous difference map did show positive peaks up to a level of ~10 sigma that matched those observed in the above real-space difference maps, with a 3 sigma level corresponding to 0.0137 e/A^3. The CCanom was also low (1-5% between shells), so I was thinking that another approach might be more suitable for this data?
Cheers,
Jordan
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From: Eric Montemayor