Tanley等人对晶体学和化学的反应应该总是在一起:顺铂和卡铂的蛋白质复合物的警示故事。

Simon W M Tanley, Kay Diederichs, Loes M J Kroon-Batenburg, Colin Levy, Antoine M M Schreurs, John R Helliwell
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引用次数: 11

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本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Response from Tanley et al. to Crystallography and chemistry should always go together: a cautionary tale of protein complexes with cisplatin and carboplatin.
Clearly cisplatin and carboplatin and their interactions with proteins are important as is shown by the various research groups that are actively involved studying these X-ray crystal structures, and which are focused on in the critique article by Shabalin et al. (2015). We welcome this detailed interest by Shabalin et al. in these various crystal structures in the PDB and for harnessing the processed structure factor and derived atomic coordinates data. We have also made available numerous raw diffraction image data sets as due diligence for researchers in this area. Some of these have been harnessed. We aim to complete the availability of the full suite of raw data sets as soon as possible. The suggestions of Shabalin et al. (2015) of the need for improved tools in model validation, especially for metal protein ligand complexes, we also support. Some of the tools that are discussed by Shabalin et al. (2015) are not yet available in e.g the CCP4 suite, which we use predominantly. We also have used the SHELX suite for metal occupancy refinements as a complement to CCP4. The predominant criticisms of our publications by Shabalin et al. (2015) involve our model refinements of hen egg-white lysozyme with various platin metal ligand types. These model refinements are the work and responsibility of SWMT and JRH. We wish to note that we did not use the incorrect PDB ligand for cisplatin cited by Shabalin et al. (2015) and instead used individual atom placements not least for the tendency for the chemical transformation of these two platins that we observed. Shabalin et al. (2015) shared with us their three new refinements, with a brief e-mail commentary, ahead of their publication. These three new model refinements showed differences in approach between our and their methods, namely a larger placement of split occupancy side chains than we had made and placement of a larger number of bound waters. We did not accept the bulk of these changes as there was insufficient, if any, electron-density evidence. However, we do agree with their critical scrutiny of our bound solvent/ solute molecules, highlighted in their article, and the need for some assignment changes or deletion. We note that on these the PDB annotators were very thorough and did offer queries in some cases. SWMT and JRH discussed these but thought that the precision of their placement was poor and the rather
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