| Name | Last modified | Size | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parent Directory | - | |||
| 2ymt.pdb | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 215K | ||
| GammaXeSAD.docx | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 656K | ||
| GammaXeSAD.pdf | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 424K | ||
| INFO.txt | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 113 | ||
| README.html | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 2.3K | ||
| freeR.mtz | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 193K | ||
| gamma.pir | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 148 | ||
| gamma_Xe_mosflm.mtz | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 7.8M | ||
| gamma_model.pdb | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 78K | ||
| gamma_native.mtz | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 5.6M | ||
| initial_phases.mtz | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 345K | ||
| merged_intensities_Xe.mtz | 2017-05-24 10:36 | 338K | ||
This structure can be solved quickly by either experimental phasing or molecular replacement and is a good one to try as an introduction to CCP4.
This can be solved by Molecular Replacement on the Xe or native data using the file gamma_model.pdb (this solved structure, 1 molecule in the asu), or 2ymt.pdb (the human homologue, 45% identical), or by experimental SAD phasing from the Xe data (3 Xe sites, + maybe 3 possible sulphurs)
This is the data for 1gyu kindly donated by Phil Evans.
Last modified: Thu Feb 26 14:41:15 GMT 2015