Determination of Allowable Conformations for 16S rRNA Based on
Chemical Footpriting Data
This project, supported by NIH NLM-05652 and the Culpeper Foundation,
is part of the Helix
Group at Stanford School of Medicine. Please address
inquiries to russ.altman@stanford.edu.
This work is still under review.
Computational Methods for Determining the Allowable Conformational
Space of 16S rRNA Based on Chemical Footprinting Data
Fink, D., Chen, R., Noller, H., and Altman, R.
Model information and coordinates
-
Mean position and variance of 65 helix centers of mass. This file
summarizes the position of the centers of mass
for each of the 65 helices positioned in our model. The file
contains the helix ID (based on Figure 1 of paper), the mean x y and z
position, as well as the variance in x y and z directions and the covariances
for xy xz and yz.
-
Mean position and variance of modeled phosphates This file summarizes
the MEAN position for the phosphates contained within the modeled helices. It
is in PDB format. The mean position is given as the x,y,z coordinates, and the
B-factor field is used to report the volume of variation for each phosphate.
Because these are average positions, they may not satisfy detailed assessments
of packing and stereochemistry.
- Three approximate structures selected from the distribution of possible
structures. The stereochemistry within helices is roughly correct, and
packing violations are minimized, within the precision (15 - 25 Angstroms)
allowed by the model. The three instances correspond to the
First,
second, and
third
instances shown in Figure 5 of the paper.
-
Mean position and variance of protein positions. This summarizes
the positions and variances of protein centers of mass for model. The
position of S19 was modified in response to inconsistencies in the data. S20
was not used in our model building effort due to possible problems with
its neutron-diffraction defined position.
-
VRML representation of a sample model. This is an input file for
the Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML) that is available on many
web browsers, to look at a single 3D model that we have constructed. THIS
IS COMING SOON.
Last update May, 1996. altman@smi.stanford.edu