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Revision as of 05:40, 25 July 2018

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Welcome to the PyMOL Wiki!
The community-run support site for the PyMOL molecular viewer.
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Quick Links
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Script Library Plugins FAQ
Gallery | Covers PyMOL Cheat Sheet (PDF) Getting Help
News & Updates
Official Release PyMOL v2.2 has been released on July 24, 2018.
POSF PyMOL Open-Source Fellowship program accepting applications for 2018-2019
New Plugin ProBiS H2O is a new plugin for identification of conserved waters in protein structures.
Selection keywords New polymer.protein and polymer.nucleic selection keywords. Thanks everyone who participated in the poll!
Plugin Update MOLE 2.5 is an updated version of channel analysis software in PyMOL
New Script dssr_block is a wrapper for DSSR (3dna) and creates block-shaped nucleic acid cartoons
New Plugin LiSiCA is a new plugin for 2D and 3D ligand based virtual screening using a fast maximum clique algorithm.
New Plugin PyANM is a new plugin for easier Anisotropic Network Model (ANM) building and visualising in PyMOL.
New Plugin Bondpack is a collection of PyMOL plugins for easy visualization of atomic bonds.
New Plugin MOLE 2.0 is a new plugin for rapid analysis of biomacromolecular channels in PyMOL.
3D using Geforce PyMOL can now be visualized in 3D using Nvidia GeForce video cards (series 400+) with 120Hz monitors and Nvidia 3D Vision, this was previously only possible with Quadro video cards.
Older News See Older News.
Did you know...

MakeVinaCommand

= Overview =

Vina is a new, very fast, molecular docking program, written by Oleg Trott. In order to run Vina, you should have MGLTools1.5.4 installed (you need prepare_receptor4.py and prepare_ligand4.py). But, you don't need MGLTools for this script to run.

To run Vina it needs to know the center of the protein and also its extents (size in XYZ directions). We can easily do this with PyMOL.

Requirements:

  • COM -- simple script to get the center of mass of a selection

Todo:

  • Commandline options
  • Robustness to vagaries of input
  • Usage & Help

Usage

pymol -cq ./makeVinaCommandFromProtein.py proteinFile ligandFile

For high-throughput screening, where we compare each ligand to each protein, I typically wrap the script in a for-loop like: <source lang="bash">

  1. foreach protein in my proteins directory

for protein in proteinsDir/*; do

 # foreach ligand in my ligands directory
 for ligand in ligandsDir/*; do;
   # make a  ..→
A Random PyMOL-generated Cover. See Covers.