research papers
Verification: model-free phasing with enhanced predicted models in ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER
aCrystallographic Methods, Institute of Molecular Biology of Barcelona (IBMB-CSIC), Barcelona Science Park, Helix Building, Baldiri Reixac 15, 08028 Barcelona, Spain, bDepartment of Crystallography and Structural Biology, Institute of Physical Chemistry `Rocasolano', Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, Spain, cDepartment of Biophysics and Pharmacology, Biosciences Institute, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Botucatu, Sao Paulo 18618-689, Brazil, and dICREA, Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats, Passeig Lluís Companys 23, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
*Correspondence e-mail: uson@ibmb.csic.es
Structure predictions have matched the accuracy of experimental structures from close homologues, providing suitable models for ARCIMBOLDO. The particularities of predicted models are inherently addressed in the new predicted_model mode, rendering preliminary treatment superfluous but also harmless. B-value conversion from predicted LDDT or error estimates, the removal of unstructured polypeptide, hierarchical decomposition of structural units from domains to local folds and systematically probing the model against the experimental data will ensure the optimal use of the model in phasing. Concomitantly, the exhaustive use of models and stereochemistry in phasing, and validation raises the concern of crystallographic model bias and the need to critically establish the information contributed by the experiment. Therefore, in its predicted_model mode ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER will first determine whether the input model already constitutes a solution or provides a straightforward solution with Phaser. If not, extracted fragments will be located. If the landscape of solutions reveals numerous, clearly discriminated and consistent probes or if the input model already constitutes a solution, model-free verification will be activated. Expansions with SHELXE will omit the partial solution seeding phases and all traces outside their respective masks will be combined in ALIXE, as far as consistent. This procedure completely eliminates the search model in favour of the inferences derived from this model. In the case of fragments, an incorrect starting hypothesis impedes expansion. The predicted_model mode has been tested in different scenarios.
phasing. Even in predictions that present large differences due to the relative movement of domains or poorly predicted areas, very accurate regions tend to be present. These are suitable for successful fragment-based phasing as implemented inKeywords: phasing; ARCIMBOLDO; ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER; fragment-based molecular replacement; verification; model bias; predictions; AlphaFold; RoseTTAFold.
1. Introduction
AlphaFold (Jumper et al., 2021) has brought the accuracy of predictions to a level of atomic detail comparable to that of close homologs, as seen in CASP13 and CASP14 (Kryshtafovych et al., 2019). When AlphaFold or RoseTTAFold predictions are successful, solving the crystallographic by (MR) is facilitated (Baek et al., 2021; Pereira et al., 2021; Millán et al., 2021) provided that the particularities of the models are factored in. CCP4 (Winn et al., 2011) has adapted its programs and developed new tools to make the most of predicted models (McCoy et al., 2022; Simpkin et al., 2022; Krissinel et al., 2022). Even in cases where only part of the predicted model closely represents the structure in the crystal it will be possible to exploit fragments to identify these parts and expand the partial solutions. ARCIMBOLDO (Rodríguez et al., 2009) combines the location of model fragments such as polyalanine helices using Phaser (McCoy et al., 2007) with density modification (Sheldrick, 2002) and map tracing (Sheldrick, 2010; Thorn & Sheldrick, 2013; Usón & Sheldrick, 2018) using SHELXE. Other fragment-based methods, such as FRAP (Shrestha & Zhang, 2015), AMPLE (Bibby et al., 2012) and MrBUMP (Keegan & Winn, 2007), also make suitable use of partial models in combination with density modification.
Modern crystallographic methods have become increasingly integrated and are informed by prior knowledge at all stages (Usón et al., 2021). The extensive use of practically complete previous models throughout a crystallographic determination (Kovalevskiy et al., 2016) is combined with a reliance on ideal stereochemistry as the fundamental principle in validation of the experimental outcome (Williams et al., 2018). This should raise concern, as phases are not experimentally determined in but rather are adopted from the model hypothesis. As a consequence, crystallographic model bias is a known, well documented issue (Bhat, 1988; Brünger, 1992; Kleywegt, 2000). Unequivocally establishing the information contributed by the experiment beyond the model should be a prime objective in a crystallographic determination (Terwilliger et al., 2008). Fragment-based structure solution was originally introduced as an ab initio phasing method, relying on general hypotheses and deriving validation from the fact that correct hypotheses would successfully expand beyond the starting model, providing independent information. ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER (Sammito et al., 2014; Millán et al., 2018) extracts fragments from remote homologs and refines them against the experimental data to identify such successful, starting hypotheses through their expansion. Even with fragments derived from a perfect model, if only their extensions and not the starting hypothesis itself is adopted a model-free phasing is achieved. The present work explores the application of such model-free phasing with predicted models within the workflow of ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER or directly from a solution. The new implementation can also address multimeric structures. Given a comprehensive, highly accurate model, locating the independent fragments is pointless, but local verification of its features remains informative. Whichever route is followed, after the location of complete or partial models, the traces resulting from the expansion of partial structures from which the starting structure is omitted are combined in our software ALIXE (Millán et al., 2020; Millán, Sammito, Garcia-Ferrer et al., 2015). This is especially relevant in the typical solution landscape produced by predicted models, characterized by multiple clearly discriminated probes, as opposed to the scarce correct solutions rendered by remote homologs. The present work describes the use of ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER to solve crystallographic structures with predicted models and introduces model-free verification to probe the local validity of the ARCIMBOLDO solution or of external MR solutions. Its use is illustrated and discussed with representative test cases.
2. Materials and methods
2.1. Computing setup
Structure solutions and tests were run on a local HTCondor v.8.4.5 (Tannenbaum et al., 2001) grid made up of 160 nodes totalling 225 GFlops and on a 24-core workstation with 128 GB RAM (Intel Xeon CPU E5-2680 v.3) running Linux.
AlphaFold predictions were performed on two workstations with the following characteristics: AMD Ryzen Thread Ripper 3975WX, Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090 24 GB. AlphaFold2 was run on a virtual machine with an Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS OS using 48 of the host's 64 cores and 192 GB of its 256 GB RAM, and also on a workstation with Intel Core i9-9980XE, GeForce GTX 1080 8 GB, 64 GB RAM, Debian 10 (Buster).
2.2. External software
Phaser (McCoy et al., 2007) is required to perform the MR search of the fragment models. Phaser 2.8.x versions from the CCP4 (Winn et al., 2011) and Phenix (Liebschner et al., 2019) distributions were used.
SHELXE (Sheldrick, 2010) is required to provide density modification based on the sphere-of-influence algorithm (Sheldrick, 2002) and the SHELXE 2022 version was used for phase extension and model tracing (Usón & Sheldrick, 2022). Along with side-chain tracing, this version incorporates masking of the starting-model map region during tracing (parameter -V).
2.3. Model prediction
AlphaFold2 was used in the cloud through the Google Colaboratory Notebook MMseqs2 (Mirdita et al., 2022), the Google Colaboratory Notebook from DeepMind (Jumper et al., 2021) or directly from a local installation on a workstation of the code distributed via the repository at https://github.com/deepmind/alphafold (Jumper et al., 2021). RoseTTAFold was used online through the server at https://robetta.bakerlab.org (Baek et al., 2021).
2.4. Figures of merit and phase comparison
The figures of merit used in decision making in the fragment-location and scoring part of the ARCIMBOLDO runs described in this work were the Phaser intensity-based LLG and Z-score (Read & McCoy, 2016), and the between observed and calculated normalized intensities (CC; Fujinaga & Read, 1987) calculated by SHELXE (Sheldrick, 2002).
In order to combine phase sets from partial traces ARCIMBOLDO uses ALIXE (Millán et al., 2020). Two indicators are computed to probe consistency: map correlation coefficients (mapCC; Lunin & Lunina, 1996) and phase differences (wMPD). In this study, we will refer to nonrandom solutions whenever their wMPE (mean phase difference to the true phases) is below 80°.
2.5. Graphics software
Model and maps were examined with Coot version 0.8.7 (Emsley et al., 2010). Figures were prepared with the PyMOL molecular graphics system (version 1.8; Schrödinger) and Matplotlib version 1.5.3 (Hunter, 2007).
2.6. Test data and predicted models
Representative cases to cover the various uses of model-free verification within ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER, to validate an already placed MR solution obtained with a predicted model or to produce a solution with a predicted model are described. Structures and models are displayed in Fig. 1 and their characteristics are summarized in Table 1.
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2.6.1. PDB entry 5ohu
PDB entry 5ohu is a soluble lytic transglycosylase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Lee et al., 2018). The structure was originally solved with ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER (Millán et al., 2018) in the first implementation of the spherical mode, using the best-scoring model (PDB entry 1qsa; van Asselt et al., 1999) as identified using HHpred (Söding et al., 2005) with 31% sequence identity. The final solution accomplished a CC of 48% and 563 residues traced in seven chains.
2.6.2. AMIA
PDB entry 8a42 is the of a bacterial lipoprotein. The structure was originally solved with ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER starting from a template with 26% sequence identity. SEQUENCE SLIDER (Borges et al., 2020) was used to extend starting partial polyalanine models with side chains in plausible ways, increasing the signal and revealing the solution after density modification and auto-tracing with SHELXE.
2.6.3. GLYAT
GLYAT is a glycine N-acyltransferase from Bos taurus that catalyses the transmission of an acyl-coA group to a glycine molecule; this reaction participates in the detoxification of xenobiotics, especially benzoic acid. The structure was originally solved by MR with Phaser using a model predicted by RoseTTAFold (Baek et al., 2021).
2.6.4. TsaR
PDB entry 3fxq is TsaR, a LysR-type transcriptional regulator (Monferrer et al., 2010). The structure was originally solved by single with (SIRAS) experimental phasing of a xenon derivative with SHELXD (Schneider & Sheldrick, 2002) and RESOLVE (Terwilliger, 2000).
2.6.5. HheD2
PDB entry 7b73 is a halohydrin dehalogenase (Wessel et al., 2021). The structure was solved with ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER by combining fragment-based with density modification.
2.6.6. PDB entry 7vse
PDB entry 7vse is an X-ray structure of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI in complex with Zn2+ (Liao et al., 2022). The structure was solved in 2021 by MR with Phaser.
2.6.7. PDB entry 7q6t
PDB entry 7q6t corresponds to the bromo-domain of ATAD2 with AZ13824374 (Winter-Holt et al., 2022). The structure was solved in 2021 by MR with AMoRe (Navaza, 2001).
2.6.8. PDB entry 7syc
PDB entry 7syc is a nucleoside triphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase from Klebsiella pneumoniae. The structure was solved in 2021 by MR with MoRDa (Vagin & Lebedev, 2015).
2.6.9. PDB entry 7vo4
PDB entry 7vo4 is a pimaricin type I PKS thioesterase domain (apo Pim TE; Zhou et al., 2022). The structure was solved in 2021 by MR with Phaser.
2.6.10. AtzR
PDB entry 7z7j is AtzR, a LysR-type transcriptional regulator from Pseudomonas. The structure was determined with ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER using AlphaFold models (Castellví et al., 2022).
2.7. Distribution of the software
All of the ARCIMBOLDO programs are distributed through the CCP4 suite (Winn et al., 2011) and are available through the PyPI (Python Package Index) project (https://pypi.org/project/arcimboldo/). The software is under the BSD 3-clause licence. Documentation and tutorials can be found on our website (https://chango.ibmb.csic.es/arcimboldo).
3. Results and discussion
The ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER program has been adapted to optimally exploit templates derived from predicted models rather than from experimental structures of homologs, while systematically removing model bias. It is activated by setting the keyword predicted_model to true or selecting the predicted_model mode through the interfaces, and operates either on an MR solution obtained with a predicted model or directly on a predicted model. It integrates model-free verification and also incorporates a new general feature to solve structures with multiple copies in the A detailed description of the algorithm as well as examples of its application follows.
3.1. Predicted_model mode implementation
The method is implemented within ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER spherical mode, which is written in Python 3 and is backwards-compatible with Python 2.7. The current version supports X-ray diffraction data up to 2.5 Å resolution in general cases and to 3.0 Å resolution for coiled coils. Fig. 2 shows the overall workflow for the predicted_model mode, including model-free verification. The procedure starts by assessing whether the input model already constitutes a solution or straightforwardly delivers a solution in Phaser, in which case fragment location will be skipped. In either case, model preparation is carried out to eliminate unstructured and disconnected areas and to set B values. The model is then annotated for further decomposition with ALEPH (Medina et al., 2020) and decomposed in overlapping spheres of a size guided by the expected LLG in Phaser (Oeffner et al., 2018). One particularity is that annotation will strive to differentiate domains, which will be segregated during sphere generation. Fragments are located if needed, and when the landscape of solutions shows a profusion of clearly discriminated placements their expansion with SHELXE through density modification and tracing will omit the original fragments. Only the traces derived from each fragment are retained and combined in with ALIXE (Millán et al., 2020). The resulting clustered phases will be expanded until a full solution is obtained. If the structure is a multimer and expansion of a first placement does not suffice to provide a solution, subsequent copies will be located.
3.2. Model preparation: partition and annotation of the template
B values [predicted LDDT (Mariani et al., 2013) or error estimates] with physically sensible B values (Baek et al., 2021; Millán et al., 2021) and the removal of parts predicted with low confidence above a chosen threshold of pLDDT or error estimates.
is improved when using predicted models though a specific treatment that includes the replacement of the information codified asThe predicted_model mode of ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER entails a particular and automatic preparation of predicted models, which can originate from any available predictor, for example AlphaFold, RoseTTAFold, MODELLER (Webb & Sali, 2021) or SWISS-MODEL (Waterhouse et al., 2018), or can have been pre-processed for crystallographic use by another program. The predicted models are pre-processed, annotated and decomposed into fragments. Consistent with the rationale in ARCIMBOLDO (Millán, Sammito & Usón, 2015), our method will not rely on pLDDT but rather will let the experimental data select and refine stereochemically sensible input fragments prepared to be comparable. Therefore, it includes a different pre-processing of the B factors, and removal of parts predicted with low confidence is performed through ALEPH. In most cases, very low pLDDT or high error estimates will correspond to coil regions or unstructured areas, which will be detected and filtered out by ALEPH. However, in some cases correct regions might be associated with lower prediction scores, underestimating the quality of the models produced. Instead of using a threshold of pLDDT or error estimate, our approach will take a decision based on the soundness of secondary and and let the measured data probe the local model correctness and refine the model geometry.
The default pre-processing in ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER trims the side chains to alanine residues and sets a common B value of 25 Å2 for all atoms, producing a library of fragment models with equivalent scattering. Current versions of deep-learning protein predictions show high side-chain accuracy when the backbone prediction is accurate (Jumper et al., 2021), so by default side chains from predicted models will be preserved. In these models, H atoms are removed as they are placed at inappropriately long distances for the X-ray scattering experiment and are occasionally named in a way that may lead other programs to interpret them as heavier elements, and the B factors are set to a common value of 25 Å2 for the main chain and 50 Å2 for the side chains.
The secondary- and tertiary-structure elements are identified and annotated with ALEPH, relying on the relations among characteristic vectors defined from the centroids of Cα atoms to the centroids of carbonyl O atoms from all overlapping tripeptides. In this step, the removal of unstructured areas predicted with low confidence is performed. The strictness thresholds that affect the annotation of secondary-structure elements have been optimized for predicted models.
Decomposition into small, compact folds is predetermined by ALEPH through the community-clustering algorithm; this allows the identification of compact rigid groups to refine their relative rotation and translation. For predicted models, a hierarchical decomposition is performed to differentiate domains. Both criteria are combined in the generation of fragments in order to segregate domains.
The model preparation is illustrated in Fig. 3. The performance of the model treatment of the predicted_model mode is illustrated through the set of solutions summarized in Table 2. Structure solution was accomplished with Phaser. Comparison of the performance of the predicted models with and without model preparation is shown through the CC and wMPE of the MR solution against the deposited structure. In all cases model processing leads to a CC above 25%, allowing identification of when an MR solution has been input to ARCIMBOLDO for validation. In general, the CC increases with model preparation, but when a large amount of correct coil is removed the value may decrease.
3.3. Input recognition: MR solution or raw model
ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER may be employed either to verify a previously placed MR solution obtained with a predicted model or to phase using a predicted model. The program will automatically discern the situation and take the most straightforward route to eliminating model bias if the predicted_model mode is selected. When the model provided contains a CRYST1 card coincident with the experimental data it will be tested as a possible solution after model preparation. If the (CC) between the intensities calculated from the model and the experimental data exceeds 25% (Table 2), the input will be regarded as a previous solution. Otherwise, the input will be treated as an unplaced model.
3.4. Phasing
A preliminary MR search with Phaser using the complete model has been incorporated to avoid unnecessary calculations if the predicted model shows high accuracy. If the input already constitutes a solution or the processed model easily renders one, the program will proceed to model-free verification. Otherwise, an ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER spheres run optimized for predicted models will follow.
In either case, a library of equal-sized spherical fragments of comparable scattering as informed by the eLLG is extracted. Annotation and decomposition of the models in ALEPH will be conditioned by domain estimation and the library is reduced to avoid models with disjoint regions or large voids so that the domains are effectively segregated. Fragments will be placed with Phaser and the solution will be rated by their LLG after rigid-body translation Z-score, SHELXE CC and mutual consistency.
Whereas remote homologs typically render few correct partial solutions, which do not stand out amongst incorrect solutions, predicted models tend to reveal numerous, clearly discriminated and consistent probes, as shown for TsaR in Fig. 4. Given such a landscape of solutions, model-free verification will be activated within the ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER workflow, enforcing systematic elimination of the starting models to free the from bias. Otherwise, if few or marginal solutions are obtained, their combination in ALIXE and expansion with SHELXE will proceed as in the standard ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER spherical mode.
3.5. Model-free verification
Model-free verification may start from many partial solutions produced within ARCIMBOLDO or from a distinct full MR solution, in which case the placed model will be fragmented into equal-sized spheres centred on each atom. Depending on the size of the structure more or fewer spheres will be produced and a representative selection will take place covering the full structure. These partial solutions will be subjected to expansion and autotracing in SHELXE, masking the map in the region of the original model and rendering traces exclusively outside this area. All consistent traces will be combined in and the new map will be iteratively modified and traced. This procedure completely eliminates the search model in favour of the inferences derived from this model, thus eliminating model bias. In the case of fragments, an incorrect starting hypothesis impedes expansion.
3.6. ARCIMBOLDO multicopy
If no solution is derived from the placement of a single copy and the
is known to contain a multimer of the search model, a multicopy search will be initiated. To avoid a combinatorial growth of partial solutions, the prioritization involves a search for a second copy of a subset of placed fragments, limited to the rotation and the translation functions followed by the packing filter, which are very fast steps. All probes are then sorted according to their LLG in the translation search. Only the top probes are sent to the time-consuming rigid-body and expansion steps. In cases where the is known to contain more than two copies of the template, all expected copies for each probe will be placed before the expansion step.This method is illustrated by the test case of the LysR-type transcriptional regulator AtzR (PDB entry 7z7j), which contains two copies of 300 residues in the (Castellví et al., 2022). The AlphaFold prediction yielded a model with an overall confidence of 92%. Once solved, superposition revealed an r.m.s.d. between the crystallographic structure and prediction of 4.7 Å for 277 aligned residues.
Success in phasing with one copy of this model in ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER will depend on the parameterization. A retrospective analysis of a run requiring the placement of two copies is shown, quantifying the correctness of the probes against the final refined structure through the wMPE at all stages. In the case of PDB entry 7z7j, after locating the first copy none of the probes was discriminated with prominent figures of merit, although correct placements were present. In particular, ten probes out of 160 were solutions characterized by a wMPE of between 67° and 80°. Their LLG and Z-scores did not set them apart from random placements and they would have been ranked in position 81 or below (Fig. 5a). After the prioritization step based on the translational search for the second fragment, the best model characterized by a wMPE of 67° could clearly be identified according to its figures of merit scoring the top position (LLG = 242 and Z-score = 17; Fig. 5b). Rigid-body and expansion of the top solution revealed the final structure after three cycles of density modification and autotracing. The solution was characterized by a CC of 35% and a wMPE of 45°, with 343 residues traced out of a total of 600.
The multicopy mode has proven to be effective in the solution of a previously unknown structure, a transcriptional repressor from E. coli (PDB entry 8a39). Data from crystals belonging to C2 were collected to a resolution of 2.1 Å (Rojas-Altuve et al., 2011). The volume could have hosted four copies of the 327-amino-acid monomer based on cell-content analysis. Thus, the run that solved the structure was parameterized to locate fragments for four copies. After the prioritization step based on the location of the second fragment, location of the third and the fourth copies proceeded followed by expansion with SHELXE to build the complete model with side chains. Unexpectedly, the solution revealed that the structure contained only three instead of four monomers in the asymmetric unit.
4. Discussion of test cases
Test cases subjected to the procedure described in Fig. 2 rendered the results summarized in Table 3. The first five were solved with fragments in ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER, whereas the remaining cases were solved externally by with Phaser and subjected to verification within ARCIMBOLDO. These cases were used to develop the workflow and derive default parameterization. Solution after verification is achieved over a broad range of parameterizations, whether through the fragment-phasing route or after fragment decomposition of the MR solution. The accuracy in all or part of the predicted models gives rise to, upon the omit procedure and subsequent phase clustering of the numerous correct solutions, sets characterized by a 20° lower MPE than those clusters of fragments from remote homologs. In the case of PDB entry 5ohu, for example, with fragments from a distant homolog (PDB entry 1qsa) the best wMPE obtained after their combination with ALIXE was 64°, whereas combination of the resulting traces after omitting the original fragment from a predicted model rendered a wMPE of 40°. Overall, the final solutions after the verification step are rather complete as further density modification and model building in SHELXE improves the solution. Side-chain tracing is activated unless prevented, as the sequence is derived from the model. Other than for model tracing, the results displayed correspond to the defaults that were finally adopted, which as for all ARCIMBOLDO programs may be modified by the user. The estimated r.m.s.d. of the search fragments versus the true structure is typically lower than for remote homologs and is accordingly reduced to 0.8 Å. Model decomposition and internal in the gyre and gimble steps (McCoy et al., 2018) further decreases it to 0.6 Å. An eLLG target of 60 has been adopted as a default to define the sphere size, unless the size of the template does not support it, in which case it is internally lowered.
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5. Predicted_model mode with coiled coils
Coiled-coil structures pose particular difficulties for phasing that derive from the modulation in their diffraction data (Caballero et al., 2021), resulting in incorrect partial solutions showing high figures of merit. The coiled_coil mode implemented in ARCIMBOLDO_LITE, which employs ideal polyalanine α-helices, introduced specific features to overcome this issue, including a verification procedure based on scoring discrimination between apparent solutions and artificially generated solutions (Caballero et al., 2018). Perturbations mimicking the deviations found in incorrect solutions were induced in the alternatives generated. These attempts to disprove the best solution constituted our first implementation of verification and in the case of coiled coils constitute the optimal way to identify correct solutions, discriminating them from rogue placements. If a predicted coiled-coil structure represents a single helix the specific coiled_coil mode in ARCIMBOLDO_LITE with model helices should be preferable to the predicted_model mode in ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER. However, a multimeric prediction can be used as a search model in ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER, retaining its dedicated verification rather than the general model-free procedure. When both coiled_coil and predicted_model modes are activated, ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER will follow the model preparation of a predicted model, but the coiled-coil verification of the final solution will be similar to that implemented in ARCIMBOLDO_LITE, which will consider the modulation in the data typical of coiled-coil structures.
6. Concluding remarks
The high accuracy of the new AlphaFold and RoseTTAFold predictions has an immediate impact on the way that macromolecular crystallographic determinations can proceed. A successful prediction eases the determination of starting phases provided that the particularities of such models are efficiently addressed. However, using a model at all stages in the interpretation of an experimental determination introduces model bias and the need to separate the knowledge gained from the experiment beyond the model. ARCIMBOLDO_SHREDDER addresses both needs in the implementation of its predicted_model mode. It processes predicted models irrespective of their genesis or previous pre-processing and segregates domains. If the determination proves challenging on account of the failure of a significant part of the model, achieving extension to a nearly complete structure will verify the starting hypothesis. If the model is close to the final structure, systematic elimination of all fragments used to generate extensions will locally probe every part of the experimental solution. Even though predicted models have the correct sequence and side chains in place, at the end of this verification procedure nothing comes directly from the model, but only from what could be obtained outside model fragments after the expansion step, resulting in `model-free' phasing.
Footnotes
‡These authors contributed equally; all authors contributed extensively to the work presented in this paper.
Funding information
We are grateful to the Spanish MICINN/AEI/FEDER/UE for support through the PGC2018-101370-B-100 project to IU, PID2020-115331GB-I00 to JH, a scholarship (PRE2019-087953) to EJ and a scholarship (BES-2017-080368) associated with the Structural Biology Maria de Maeztu Unit of Excellence (MDM2014-0435-01) to AM. Support from STFC-UK/CCP4 `Agreement for the integration of methods into the CCP4 software distribution, ARCIMBOLDO_LOW' is gratefully acknowledged.
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