Residual Dipolar Couplings
Partial orientation of macromolecules in solution has allowed the
detection of residual dipolar couplings (RDCs). The use of an external
orientational axis is necessary to compute the potential. There are a
few implementations of the potential. SANI is for dipolar coupling
between atoms that are directly bonded. XDIP is more flexible and can
handle H-
H dipolar couplings with fixed or varying distances. VEAN
(VEctor ANgles) uses
residual dipolar couplings converted into
intervector angles. TENSO allows the rhombicity and
amplitude of the alignment tensor to be calculated from the
structure. Neither VEAN nor TENSO utilize an orientational axis. ANIS
is a generic angular potential and can be used to test out new
orientational potentials.
The dipolar coupling is defined as
![]() |
(28.1) |
![$\theta$](img155.png)
![$z$](img606.png)
![$\phi$](img42.png)
![$x-y$](img760.png)
![$x$](img209.png)
The energy term (for SANI) is
.
References for SANI include Tjandra et al. (1997b), Clore, Gronenborn, and Tjandra (1998), Clore, Gronenborn, and Bax (1998) and Clore et al. (1999). References for XDIP include Tjandra, Marquardt, and Clore (2000). The reference for VEAN is Meiler et al. (2000). The reference for TENSO is Sass et al. (2001). A good general reference for the use of RDCs in structure determination can be found in Bax, Kontaxis and Tjandra (2001).
Subsections Xplor-NIH 2024-09-13