From: Ajasja Ljubetič (ajasja.ljubetic_at_gmail.com)
Date: Wed Feb 01 2012 - 03:44:26 CST
Dear Giacomo,
> Hello Ajasja, first of all, the centerReference and rotateReference
> options only affect the group they are defined into. If you need to center
> and rotate all groups of a colvar component (in this case, the dihedral
> component), you should copy those options inside each group. A future
> version of the colvars module will probably include "reusable groups" for
> this purpose, but in the end you achieve what you need with some cutting
> and pasting of the keywords (centerReference, rotateReference,
> refPositionsGroup, refPositionsFile) inside group1 through group4.
>
> Oh, copy-pasting is no problem. I just misread this<https://gist.github.com/1716100> error
message.
I don't know about the different number of atoms, since I can't see the PDB
> file you provided.
>
>
Here <https://gist.github.com/1716112> is the PDB file. It contains all the
atoms of my system (and hope that coordinates are selected by index as
stated in the user guide)
So to answer your final question, you don't need a relative reference
> coordinate system for a dihedral.
>
> Or perhaps you do, but then I have to ask you what you were trying to do
> when you modified the original configuration?
>
>
I use the dummy atoms to set the reference for the spherical
coordinates. So the phi is defined by a dihedral component as per your
excellent suggestion of almost one year ago :)
> Hello Asjasja, have you tried defining a dihedral, using the four atom
> groups you mention? Perhaps I'm missing a small detail, but it seems to me
> that it would provide you what you need, at least when you define the two
> axes dynamically, based on the centers of mass of those groups.
> If the difference is only adding the two axes as fixed in space (with axis
> and planeAxis), based on the gradients and system forces of dihedral,
> either Jrme or I can derive fairly easily an alternate code.
(here <http://lbf.ijs.si/ajasja/mails/ABF/enhancing-abf-DMPC/Fig1.GIF>is an
example -- the first three atoms from bottom to top are the dummy atoms,
the fourth is the COM of the spin label ring). This works nicely as long as
I keep the protein fixed.
Now I would like to release the protein. This is why I would like to keep
the dummy atoms in the same position *relative* to the heavy backbone atoms
of the spin label.
How difficult would it be to implement the rotation an centring of the
dummy atoms (when used with a valid ref positions group)?
Thank you & best regards,
Ajasja
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