Show molecular surface for one chain only

Hi Chimera folks, I have a peptide bound to a protein. They are two separate chains in single PDB. I want to show the molecular surface for the protein, but not the peptide (to see the surface where the peptide binds to the protein). This is easy (the default, actually) for small molecules. But when I select the chain of the protein and display its surface, the surface is "broken" around the peptide and I cannot see what I want. The rest of the surface is OK, but in the area of interest, I cannot see the surface. I tried the "Intersurf" command and it sort of works, but I want an MSMS molecular surface of the protein with the peptide sitting in it. Is there some trick for this other than separating the peptide from the protein and putting it into a separate model? Thanks, Darrell Darrell Hurt, Ph.D. Section Head, Computational Biology Bioinformatics and Computational Biosciences Branch (BCBB) OCICB/OSMO/OD/NIAID/NIH 31 Center Drive, Room 3B62B, MSC 2135 Bethesda, MD 20892-2135 Office 301-402-0095 Mobile 301-758-3559 http://bioinformatics.niaid.nih.gov (Within NIH) http://exon.niaid.nih.gov (Public) Disclaimer: The information in this e-mail and any of its attachments is confidential and may contain sensitive information. It should not be used by anyone who is not the original intended recipient. If you have received this e-mail in error please inform the sender and delete it from your mailbox or any other storage devices. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases shall not accept liability for any statements made that are sender's own and not expressly made on behalf of the NIAID by one of its representatives.

Oh wait. Now I've found it. The "split" or "surfcat" commands. Sorry to bother you! Darrell Hurt, Ph.D. Section Head, Computational Biology Bioinformatics and Computational Biosciences Branch (BCBB) OCICB/OSMO/OD/NIAID/NIH 31 Center Drive, Room 3B62B, MSC 2135 Bethesda, MD 20892-2135 Office 301-402-0095 Mobile 301-758-3559 http://bioinformatics.niaid.nih.gov (Within NIH) http://exon.niaid.nih.gov (Public) Disclaimer: The information in this e-mail and any of its attachments is confidential and may contain sensitive information. It should not be used by anyone who is not the original intended recipient. If you have received this e-mail in error please inform the sender and delete it from your mailbox or any other storage devices. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases shall not accept liability for any statements made that are sender's own and not expressly made on behalf of the NIAID by one of its representatives. From: <Hurt>, Darrell Hurt <darrellh@niaid.nih.gov<mailto:darrellh@niaid.nih.gov>> Date: Monday, October 22, 2012 11:23 AM To: "chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu<mailto:chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu>" <chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu<mailto:chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu>> Subject: Show molecular surface for one chain only Hi Chimera folks, I have a peptide bound to a protein. They are two separate chains in single PDB. I want to show the molecular surface for the protein, but not the peptide (to see the surface where the peptide binds to the protein). This is easy (the default, actually) for small molecules. But when I select the chain of the protein and display its surface, the surface is "broken" around the peptide and I cannot see what I want. The rest of the surface is OK, but in the area of interest, I cannot see the surface. I tried the "Intersurf" command and it sort of works, but I want an MSMS molecular surface of the protein with the peptide sitting in it. Is there some trick for this other than separating the peptide from the protein and putting it into a separate model? Thanks, Darrell Darrell Hurt, Ph.D. Section Head, Computational Biology Bioinformatics and Computational Biosciences Branch (BCBB) OCICB/OSMO/OD/NIAID/NIH 31 Center Drive, Room 3B62B, MSC 2135 Bethesda, MD 20892-2135 Office 301-402-0095 Mobile 301-758-3559 http://bioinformatics.niaid.nih.gov (Within NIH) http://exon.niaid.nih.gov (Public) Disclaimer: The information in this e-mail and any of its attachments is confidential and may contain sensitive information. It should not be used by anyone who is not the original intended recipient. If you have received this e-mail in error please inform the sender and delete it from your mailbox or any other storage devices. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases shall not accept liability for any statements made that are sender's own and not expressly made on behalf of the NIAID by one of its representatives.

Hi Darrell! By default, a model's biopolymer chains are grouped together for purposes of surfacing, but you can either define your own groups with "surfcat," or use "split" to make the chains separate models. (a) "surfcat" example: surfcat myprot :.a&protein surfcat mypep :.b&protein surface myprot surface mypep The "&protein" part intersects the chain ID with protein... there might be waters with the same chain IDs, but you wouldn't want them enclosed in the surfaces. <http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/chimera/docs/UsersGuide/midas/msms.html> (b) "split" example: split #0 ... if #0 has chains A and B, that would generate model #0.1 containing A and #0.2 containing B. Splitting may be easier if there are many chains, and in this case less error-prone since Chimera will still apply the usual rules to separate peptides from water, ions, ligands etc. <http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/chimera/docs/UsersGuide/midas/split.html> Automatic surface categories: <http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/chimera/docs/UsersGuide/midas/surface.html#surfcats> Best, Elaine ---------- Elaine C. Meng, Ph.D. UCSF Computer Graphics Lab (Chimera team) and Babbitt Lab Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry University of California, San Francisco On Oct 22, 2012, at 8:23 AM, Hurt, Darrell (NIH/NIAID) [E] wrote:
Hi Chimera folks,
I have a peptide bound to a protein. They are two separate chains in single PDB. I want to show the molecular surface for the protein, but not the peptide (to see the surface where the peptide binds to the protein). This is easy (the default, actually) for small molecules. But when I select the chain of the protein and display its surface, the surface is "broken" around the peptide and I cannot see what I want. The rest of the surface is OK, but in the area of interest, I cannot see the surface.
I tried the "Intersurf" command and it sort of works, but I want an MSMS molecular surface of the protein with the peptide sitting in it. Is there some trick for this other than separating the peptide from the protein and putting it into a separate model?
Thanks, Darrell
participants (2)
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Elaine Meng
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Hurt, Darrell (NIH/NIAID) [E]