Automated Structure Solution with the PHENIX Suite

Peter H. Zwart(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Pavel V. Afonine(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Ralf W. Grosse‐Kunstleve(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Li‐Wei Hung(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Thomas R. Ioerger(Texas A&M University), Airlie J. McCoy(University of Cambridge), Erik McKee(Texas A&M University), Nigel W. Moriarty(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Randy J. Read(University of Cambridge), James C. Sacchettini(Texas A&M University), Nicholas K. Sauter(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Laurent C. Storoni(University of Cambridge), Thomas C. Terwilliger(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Paul D. Adams(University of California, Berkeley)
Methods in molecular biology
January 1, 2008
Cited by 561

Abstract

Significant time and effort are often required to solve and complete a macromolecular crystal structure. The development of automated computational methods for the analysis, solution, and completion of crystallographic structures has the potential to produce minimally biased models in a short time without the need for manual intervention. The PHENIX software suite is a highly automated system for macromolecular structure determination that can rapidly arrive at an initial partial model of a structure without significant human intervention, given moderate resolution, and good quality data. This achievement has been made possible by the development of new algorithms for structure determination, maximum-likelihood molecular replacement (PHASER), heavy-atom search (HySS), template- and pattern-based automated model-building (RESOLVE, TEXTAL), automated macromolecular refinement (phenix. refine), and iterative model-building, density modification and refinement that can operate at moderate resolution (RESOLVE, AutoBuild). These algorithms are based on a highly integrated and comprehensive set of crystallographic libraries that have been built and made available to the community. The algorithms are tightly linked and made easily accessible to users through the PHENIX Wizards and the PHENIX GUI.


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