Jmol/Cavities pockets and tunnels
From Proteopedia
Jmol can find and display cavities, pockets, and tunnels as isosurfaces.
Definitions
Speed of RenderingIf 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. Saving Pre-Calculated IsosurfacesIn 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 IsosurfacesThe 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:
Small Cavities ExampleThe coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2 and others) spike protein, in its closed conformation, has . The smaller one is a potential drug target: here is an explanation. These cavities were rendered with the Jmol command
Below we will show the importance of each part of this command. The simplest command is
| ||||||||||||
