Missing residues and incomplete sidechains

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To emphasize, the missing residues were '''present''' in the experimental material, but are '''absent''' in the resulting model.
To emphasize, the missing residues were '''present''' in the experimental material, but are '''absent''' in the resulting model.
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In less extreme cases, the sidechain of an amino acid may be missing due to disorder, but its main chain atoms are present in the model, leading to ''incomplete sidechains''. For example, the long sidechain of a lysine on the surface of a protein may have too blurry an electron density to

Revision as of 17:18, 29 October 2024

In about 90% of the Empirical models in the PDB, some residues (amino acids or nucleotides) that were present in the experimental material are absent (have no coordinates) in the empirical model. Local regions of the crystal (for X-ray crystallography), or of the molecules prepared for cryo-electron microscopy, which were disordered are not clearly resolved in the density map used to construct the structure model. Without density to guide where to place these residues, the experimenter omits them from the model. These are called missing residues.

To emphasize, the missing residues were present in the experimental material, but are absent in the resulting model.

In less extreme cases, the sidechain of an amino acid may be missing due to disorder, but its main chain atoms are present in the model, leading to incomplete sidechains. For example, the long sidechain of a lysine on the surface of a protein may have too blurry an electron density to

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Eric Martz

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