Missing residues and incomplete sidechains

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(Missing Residues)
(Incomplete Sidechains)
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==Incomplete Sidechains==
==Incomplete Sidechains==
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In less extreme cases, coordinates for 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 indicate its position. In some cases, the model builder may give that sidechain coordinates with low or zero [[occupancy]]. In other cases, the model builder simply omits the coordinates for the sidechain, so the aforementioned surface lysine may be modeled as alanine.
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In less extreme cases, coordinates may be missing for some of the atoms in the sidechain of an amino acid 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 indicate its position. In some cases, the model builder may give that sidechain coordinates with high [[temperature]]s, or low or zero [[occupancy]]. In other cases, the model builder simply omits the coordinates for the sidechain, so the aforementioned surface lysine may be modeled as an alanine.
==How to avoid overlooking missing residues or incomplete sidechains==
==How to avoid overlooking missing residues or incomplete sidechains==
When a PDB ID model is displayed in [http://firstglance.jmol.org FirstGlance in Jmol], regions with missing residues are clearly marked with "empty baskets", as shown at right. [[FirstGlance]] reports the total number missing, and the resulting number of missing charges.
When a PDB ID model is displayed in [http://firstglance.jmol.org FirstGlance in Jmol], regions with missing residues are clearly marked with "empty baskets", as shown at right. [[FirstGlance]] reports the total number missing, and the resulting number of missing charges.

Revision as of 17:48, 31 October 2024

This page is under construction. This notice will be removed when it is complete. Eric Martz 21:26, 29 October 2024 (UTC)

Missing Residues

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. X-ray crystallography gives a clear electron density map only when every molecule in the protein crystal has the same conformation. Usually, some parts of the molecule vary in conformation between copies in the crystal, that is, they are disordered. The same may occur with protein molecules on a cryo-electron microscopy grid. These disordered portions of the molecule 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. It is very common for a few residues at the ends of protein chains to be missing.

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

Incomplete Sidechains

In less extreme cases, coordinates may be missing for some of the atoms in the sidechain of an amino acid 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 indicate its position. In some cases, the model builder may give that sidechain coordinates with high temperatures, or low or zero occupancy. In other cases, the model builder simply omits the coordinates for the sidechain, so the aforementioned surface lysine may be modeled as an alanine.

How to avoid overlooking missing residues or incomplete sidechains

When a PDB ID model is displayed in FirstGlance in Jmol, regions with missing residues are clearly marked with "empty baskets", as shown at right. FirstGlance reports the total number missing, and the resulting number of missing charges.

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Eric Martz

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