Jmol/Cavities pockets and tunnels
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Before saving the scene, you can add a caption that will display under the molecular display. The caption can include | Before saving the scene, you can add a caption that will display under the molecular display. The caption can include | ||
*Links to pages within Proteopedia using double brackets, such as [[6zgi]] (wikitext <nowiki>[[6zgi]]</nowiki>). | *Links to pages within Proteopedia using double brackets, such as [[6zgi]] (wikitext <nowiki>[[6zgi]]</nowiki>). | ||
| + | *Links to pages outside Proteopedia using single brackets, such as [http://jmol.org jmol.org] (wikitext <nowiki>[http://jmol.org jmol.org]</nowiki>). | ||
Revision as of 17:27, 1 January 2021
CAUTION: This page is under construction and is not ready for use. When this page is adequately completed, this notice will be removed. Eric Martz 01:02, 1 January 2021 (UTC)
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Contents |
Preparing Isosurface Scenes for Proteopedia
This section is under construction and awaits major revisions. It is not ready for use.
Speed of Rendering
If you use the isosurface commands below, do so in the Jmol Java application, not in JSmol in Proteopedia. Depending on the size of the molecule, cavity isosurface commands take about a minute to complete in the Java application, which is many times faster than JSmol. You would have to wait many minutes for completion in JSmol.
Use PNGJ Files
The best way to include cavity isosurfaces in a Proteopedia scene (green link) is to upload a properly prepared PNGJ file that includes the cached isosurfaces. Proteopedia's Molecular Scene Authoring Tools (SAT) load molecule tab accepts an uploaded PNGJ file.
Before saving the scene, you can add a caption that will display under the molecular display. The caption can include
- Links to pages within Proteopedia using double brackets, such as 6zgi (wikitext [[6zgi]]).
- Links to pages outside Proteopedia using single brackets, such as jmol.org (wikitext [http://jmol.org jmol.org]).
In order to speed up the green links below, the isosurfaces were pre-calculated in the Jmol Java application and then saved into .jvxl (Jmol voxel) files (and uploaded to Proteopedia). These can be quickly loaded without re-computing the isosurfaces. After a cavity isosurface command has completed, the calculated surfaces can be saved with the Jmol command
write filename.jvxl
Later, you can load the saved isosurfaces without re-calculating them using the command
isosurface filename.jvxl
Generating Cavity Isosurfaces
The Jmol commands for generating cavity isosurfaces will be found in the Jmol/JSmol Interacive Scripting Documention under isosurfaces: molecular/solvent surfaces. Near the bottom of that very long section, important commands for after the cavity isosurfaces are calculated:
- isosurface area set (integer) reports the surface area of one isosurface in Å2.
- isosurface delete to clear existing isosurfaces before a new calculation.
- isosurface set (integer) displays just one of the isosurfaces.
- isosurface set 0 displays all of the isosurfaces.
- isosurface volume set (integer) reports the volume of one isosurface in Å3.
See Also
References and Notes
- ↑ Bondi, A., J. Phys. Chem. 68:441, 1964.
- ↑ Diameter of water molecule at B10NUMB3R5, a collaboration between Harvard Medical School and the Weizmann Institute of Science. See also Distance between water molecules in bulk water.
- ↑ Volume of water molecule bound to an amino acid at B10NUMB3R5, a collaboration between Harvard Medical School and the Weizmann Institute of Science.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Cavity of interest was manually disconnected from the largest cavity.
- ↑ Sum of volumes of cavity sets 5 and 11.
- ↑ Sum of volumes of 2 clusters of pseudoatoms.
- ↑ Sum of volumes of cavity sets 6, 9, 10, and 12.
- ↑ Sum of volumes of 2 clusters of pseudoatoms. One quarter of the cavity failed to be detected with a cavity probe radius of 2.5 Å.
- ↑ PACUPP in offset mode fails to find 3/4 of the cavity with a cavity probe radius of 2.5 Å.
