Hi Elaine
Very many thanks for clearing that up for me!
I was hoping that there was something in Chimera like the symexp command in PyMol that takes a protein and then creates all its crystallographic neighbours (all symmetry related objects) within a given cut-off distance from the original molecule. I think that what I will have to do is to generate the symmetry-related molecules using PyMol, save them as PDB files, and then open them in Chimera for further handling.
Many thanks once again
Anthony
________________________________________
From: Elaine Meng [
meng@cgl.ucsf.edu]
Sent: 09 July 2018 18:17
To: Lee A.G.
Cc:
chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.eduSubject: Re: [Chimera-users] Use of sym command
Hi Anthony,
You must be referring to this message:
<
http://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/pipermail/chimera-users/2009-January/003446.html>
The PDB ID in that message contains ā1ā number one not ālā letter ell. So if you use 2o1i which is a DNA, your command will work. It does not do anything with 2oli because that protein monomer is already the biological assembly, at least according to its page at RCSB: <
https://www.rcsb.org/structure/2oli>
I hope this helps,
Elaine
-----
Elaine C. Meng, Ph.D.
UCSF Chimera(X) team
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry
University of California, San Francisco
On Jul 9, 2018, at 5:03 AM, Lee A.G. <A.G.Lee@soton.ac.uk> wrote:
Hi Elaine
I am trying to use the sym command to generate BIOMT-described copies of a protein. As a test I have used 2oli, as in your contribution of 12 Jan 2009. Having loaded 2oli and entered the command
sym #0 #0
I get the error message "No symmetric molecule copies".
Any help gratefully received
Anthony Lee
_______________________________________________
Chimera-users mailing list:
Chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.eduManage subscription:
http://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/mailman/listinfo/chimera-users