Advanced starters guide

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This walkthrough uses a small size example based on a real tomogram to covers several tasks.

The example data set

The data is a fraction of a tomogram. The full tomogram was used in "Cryo-electron tomography reveals novel features of a viral RNA replication compartment." (Ertel et al.), and represents several FHV viruses docked in the outer membrane of a mitochondrion.

Average for several hundreds of particles. The "crown" area in shown under a red shadow.

Downloading

In principle, you can download all the files related to this example with the command:

dpkhelp.wiki.downloadExample('fhv');

If it fails under Matlab or the Dynamo command line, you can try to directly use the linux order

wget https://wiki.dynamo.biozentrum.unibas.ch/w/doc/data/fhv/crop.rec

or

curl -O https://wiki.dynamo.biozentrum.unibas.ch/w/doc/data/fhv/crop.rec

under MacOS.

This should have created the file called crop.rec in your current directory.

Size check of a file

You're probably curious to see what's inside, so that let's write first:

dfile crop.rec

to let Dynamo check the dimensions of the file. The header of a .rec file is readed as a regular mrc, yielding:

 filetype: volume
 size: 1285 x 956 x 786

So, it's a tomogram.

Lightweight visualization

We can inspect quickly its contents with dtmshow

dtmshow -otf crop.rec

Hereby, the flag -otf means "on the fly", telling dtmshow to not preload the full tomogram, but to access in disk the individual slices that are needed when inspecting a particular area.

Basic controls of dtmshow

Go up and down. We want to select the locations were the vesicles intersect the mitochondrion membrane and average them together. For this, we need to catalogue the tomogram, so that our annotations are stored with a clear relationship with the tomogram.

Cataloguing the tomogram

We can create catalogues just to contain a single tomogram. They are useful to keep track of all annotations, and of the typical transforms (binning, cropping of fractions) that we usually perform on a larged size tomogram of interest. In this case, we can create the catalogue directly from the command line:

 >dcm -create fhv 

where dcm is the short form of dynamo_catalogue_manager and fhv is just an arbitrary name. The just created catalogue is empty, and we can add our tomogram with:

 dcm -c fhv -at crop.rec

We can check that the tomogram is in the catalogue by asking Dynamo to show the contents of the catalogue

dcm -c fhv -l tomograms

or

dcm -c fhv -l t

The flag -l asks Dynamo to list items of a given category of catalogue contents, in this case tomograms

Prebinning the tomograms

We typically want to prebin the tomogram, i.e., have a version of |smaller size that is known to the catalogue. This version will be useful in some operations that require a full tomogram in memory, an operation that can consume much memory and need a long time. In this example, this is probably not necessary: a tomogram with a sidelength on x and y of ~1000 pixels shouldn't pose any visualization problem. Still, in the command line, we can write:

dynamo_catalogue_bin('fhv', 1, 'zchunk', 300); 

where the parameter zchunk represents the maximum number of z slices that are kept simultaneously in the memory during the binning process. This parameter might be important for larger size tomograms.

Operation with GUI

These steps could have been performed thorugh the dcm GUI <tbi>

Annotation of particle positions

Now we can open the tomogram through the catalogue:

dtmslice crop.rec -c fhv  -prebinned 1 
dtmslice opened on the FHV example tomogramdtmslice

Probably you don't like the initial contrast, change it with the button in the toolbar.

contrast adjustment options inside dtmslice

Navigating the tomogram

Use the bar to move the slice up and dow, or drag it with the cursor while keeping the main mouse button pressed. Other axiliary tools are the keys x,y,z to change the slice orientation, the number of projected slices (called "thickness" in the GUI controls).

Creation of models to contain annotations

In this example we just want to manually pick some particles. This can be done creating a general or box model, which will reside in memory till we save it into the catalogue.

Creating a new model in the scene. Each annotation is represented by a box

After creating the model, it will be only model currently active in the dtmslice scene. You can add new points pressing on [c]. The idea is to mark on the positions where you see the "neck" of a vesicle (what we called "crowns") in contact with the outer mitochondrial membrane.

Clicking the crowns on screen

The last marked point can be deleted by pressing [delete]. An arbitrary point can be deleting by clicking on it with the auxiliary mouse button. This will open a menu that includes the option of deleting the point (through Ctrl+X in Linux or Cmmd+X in Mac).

At this stage you probably want to change the transparence of the depicted slice, so that you can control which objects have been already clicked below the depicted slide.

Selection of points. Transparency of slide was set to 0.8

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When you are done, remember to save the model, using the menu options on active model or simply clicking on the disk icon in tomoslice.

Cropping particles

Now we want to use the positions that we have marked to extract the subtomograms and format them as a data folder. The first thing we need is an estimation of the sidelength in pixels of each of the subtomograms. In dtmslice We can use the keys [1] and [2] to define two anchor points that appear as rombohedra. Clicking (with the right button) onto the black dashed that links the will show on screen both coordinates and the distance between them. All distances are reported in pixels of the not-binned tomogram: even if you are using any un-binned version, Dynamo keeps track of it.

Measuring distances with [1] , [2] and right-click

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We will thus choose to create a datafolder with a cubic sidelength of 128 pixels (remember that the particles will be cropped in the unbinned tomogram). This will ensure that the crowns fit comfortably inside the physical box, even if our manual picking imposes an error of several pixels. If you were using, say, a thickness parameter of 10 pixles in dtmslice, you have to count with at least this inaccuracy in the location of the particles.

Now, we check that the catalogued tomogram contains the model that we manually picked before:

>> dcmodels fhv
Volume 1 contains 1 models in total
/Users/casdanie//fhv/tomograms/volume_1/models/mboxes.omd

Creating a table

We could just use the catalogue GUI to extract the particles, be it is also possible to proceed directly with the command line. We will use the dtcrop command, .which requires preparing a table with the information of the model.

  m = dread('/Users/casdanie/fhv/tomograms/volume_1/models/mboxes.omd');
t = m.grepTable();

Here, you read the file into a model object (which we arbitrarily choose to call m), and then you use the grepTable method on this object to extract a variable into your workspace. We arbitrarily call it t.

Note that we can extract models directly from the output of dcmodels

  dcmodels fhv -i 1 -ws o;
m = dread(o.files{1});
t = m.grepTable();

i.e., we load the answer of dcmodels for volume index -i 1in the output variable o . Inside it, there is a field called 'files' which contains a cell array of files containing models. Then we read the first entry o.files{1}.

Whichever way you create the table variable t, it is just a matrix with a row for each particle, and a summary of the information coded inside can be created through:

>>dtinfo(t);
 
        size                :  22 35 
        NaNs                :  0
 
 COLUMN 
[  2  ] marked for alignment:  22
[  3  ] included in average :  22
[ 4-6 ] shifts              :  all zero
[ 7-9 ] angles              :  all zero
[  10 ] cross correlation   :  min: 0.00  max: 0.00  mean: 0.00  std: 0.00
[  13 ] Fourier sampling    :  1 (single tilt around y) 
[  13 ] fsampling types     :  all of the same type 
[14-15] ytilt range         :  min:120.00   max:120.00
[16-17] xtilt range         :  min:120.00   max:120.00
[  20 ] linked volumes      :  total 1 (labels: [1])
[  21 ] regions inside tomograms :  total 1 (labels: [0])
[  22 ] user-defined classes:  total 1 (labels: [0])
[  23 ] annotation types    :  total 1 (labels: [0])
[24-26] spatial locations   :  initialized: 22
[  24 ]   *  x              :  min: 645.21  max: 1001.92  mean: 799.05  std: 109.44
[  25 ]   *  y              :  min: 23.78  max: 917.51  mean: 484.07  std: 271.28
[  26 ]   *  z              :  min: 198.00  max: 563.00  mean: 415.55  std: 114.03
[  31 ] original tags       :  total 1 (labels: [0])
[  32 ] compacted particles :  total 1 (labels: [1])
[  34 ] references          :  total 1 (labels: [0])
[  35 ] subreferences       :  total 1 (labels: [0])
[  36 ] apix                :  Warning: column not available in this table
[  37 ] defocus             :  Warning: column not available in this table

Using dtcrop

The simplest syntax of dtcrop requires passing the name of the tomogram from which we want to crop (syntax varies for cropping from multiple tomograms). We know that the file is crop.rec, and we could directly insert this name in the command. But a catalogued model already contains information about its source tomogram (inside its property cvolume, so that we can always track it back. We could then define a variable tomogramFile by accessing this information inside the model variable m:

tomogramFile = m.cvolume.file();

and launch the cropping order:

o = dtcrop(tomogramFile,t,'particlesData',128);

where you could add the mw flag to let Dynamo use several cores. In any case, for this number or particles the cropping should take some seconds. The last part of the final output into screen should look like this:

21 [read_subtomogram] Volume has size 1285 956 786
[read_subtomogram] Accessing subvolume x: 713:840; y: 339:466; z: 160:287  totalling ~ 16.0Mb
Elapsed time is 0.191014 seconds.
22 
Total time invested in cropping: 7s
[table_crop] Done extracting 20 particles
             from tomogram      :"/Users/casdanie/dynamo/devmac/workplace/paris/crop.rec" 
             destination folder :"particlesData" 
             excluded particles : 2   
 
 [ok] table_crop 

informing you that some of the particles where excluded, as they were probably too close to the boundary of the tomogram, given the sidelength we asked for. Inside the created data folder,

you will find the table particlesData/crop.tbl, which only indexes the actually cropped particles.


Creating an average

The particles can now be averaged together. They have different orientations, but in this tomogram we only have a fraction of the membrane.

oa = daverage('particlesData','t','particlesData/crop.tbl');

If you want to let Dynamo pass maps into Chimera, you have to inform Dynamo on the location of Chimera.

dchimera -path /Applications/Chimera.app/Contents/MacOS/chimera 

Project to find membrane orientations

We first need to create files with the average and the table that we have till now in memory:

dwrite(t,'raw.tbl');
dwrite(oa.average,'rawTemplate.em');

We can create a project directly thorugh the command line:

dcp.new('first','d','particlesData','template','rawTemplate.em','masks','default','t','particlesData/crop.tbl');

...and go directly to the panel of numerical parameters to create a project adapted for catching the general orientation of the membrane:

Numerical parameters for just membrane orientation

mbparse.multicore.checkPhysicalCores

Your project invokes multicore operations (2 cores required).
Dynamo  will now test your hardware to check that it can run the project.
Starting parallel pool (parpool) using the 'local' profile ...

After running the project, we check the created average:

ddb first:a -v 

This command asks the database (hence db) of the project first to look for the item of type average, by default accessing the last computed one. The flag -v sends the output of the database query to the depiction GUI called dview.

First average, no azimuthal rotation was tested. Shown in dview program

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Apparently, the project finds the membranes and centers the particles correctly. If you show the volume in Chimera (by clicking in the Export>Send to Chimera option in the dview window ).

First average, no azimuthal rotation was tested

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We can check the individual particles:

ddbrowse -d first:data -t first:rt 
ddbrowse explores the aligned particles, each one represented as a projection.

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Aligning the axis of symmetry

We would like to bring the axis of symmetry to the zdirection. This will create an intuitive separation between the two first euler angles that represent "change of orientation of the main axis", and the third one that represents "azimuthal rotation about the new axis". We want that azimuthal rotations occur about an axis of possible symmetry, which by convention is located along z. There are several ways to achieve this. A simple one is to create a model of the membrane/crown geometry, align our average to it (with dalign), and use the alignment parameters to create a new table. With this new table and average we will be able study possible symmetries with a new project.


Creating a template aligned with z

Geometrical shapes of many types can be created with dmask,dsphere,dcylinder,dshell and dtube, and combined with dynamo_mask_combine. However, there are also some available utilities to create templates representing frequently occurring membraneous geometries:

mr = dpktomo.examples.motiveTypes.MembraneWithRod();
mr.sidelength = 128;
mr.rodRadius = 20; mr.rodShift = [0,0,10];mr.rodHeight= 10;
mr.getMask();
template  = mr.mask;

Note that you can check the list of properties inside the object mr just by typing it without the semicolon and pressing [Return]

We can check the result with:

mr.viewMask();


A simple template with rotational symmetry axis aligned along z


Aligning the previous average along z

The mask is white on black by definition. The tomogram data in this case represents bright protein on dark background, so that in this case we want to align the previously computed average to the mask of the mr object.

The alignment does not need to scan azimuthal rotations, so that our 'inplane_range' will be 0. The 'cone_range' will be the full sphere, and we take and spacing of 30 degrees. As we are looking for coarse orientations, we can bin the two volumes twice (yielding volumes with a sidelength of 32 pixels). We will also "nail" the new center to the physical center of the box (parameter limm setto 1 below).

Now we read the average computed by the project first into a workspace variable which we arbitrarily call previousAverage

ddb first:a -r previousAverage;

Here, the volume previousAverage will be treated as a "particle" to be aligned onto a template, which in this case is the volume contained in mr.mask.

sal = dalign(previousAverage,mr.mask,'cr',360,'cs',30,'ir',0,'dim',32,'limm',1,'lim',[10,10,10]); 

The flags are the same parameters that would be used in an alignment project. You can check the shorthands with dvhelp.

The output result sal contains many fields. We can, for instance directly visualize how the previous average looks like when transformed through the results of this dalign operation. For this, use the field aligned_particle in the output sal:

dview(sal.aligned_particle);


A simple template with rotational symmetry axis aligned along z

Applying the z-alignment to the table

We don't want just to get a z-oriented average: we also want to convert the table yield by the first project into a table that, when applied onto the original data, produces a correct, z-aligned average. For this, we use the alignment parameters coded inside the output sal (as field .Tp) and apply them onto the table.

ddb first:rt -r tf

The variable tf contains now the original table, which is now rotated and shifted according with the rigid body transform Tp inside sal

 tr =  dynamo_table_rigid(tf,sal.Tp); 

now the rectified table tfz should contain the metadata that makes the particles "point upward". We use now the typical sanity check to assess that a table behave as expected: we apply it to the particles in its paired data folder and check the average.

oz = daverage('first:data','t',tr,'fc',1);

whose results can be checked by:

dview(oz); 
Particles aligned with rectified table tr


We can visualize this operation by plotting an sketch with the orientation of the particles. We first show the results for the table computed in the project first

figure; dtplot('first:rt','m','sketch','sketch_length',100,'sm',30); view(-230,30);axis equal;

sketch of orientations after computation of the the project first

Here, the 'z' orientation computed for each particle is represented by the longest semiaxis. Note that with the original definition of the template, the 'z' points -approximately- along the direction of the 'z' in the tomogram. If we depict the same plot with the table we just computed:

figure;
dtplot(tr,'m','sketch','sketch_length',100,'sm',30);
view(-230,30);axis equal;
sketch of orientations in the rectified table

we see that now the 'z' axis in each particle is pointing orthogonally(-ish) to the membrane. A different quick check would be to show the projections of the particles along y. Instead of using the GUI ddbrowse, we can create this depiction with a single command:

figure;dslices('particlesData','t',tr,'projy','*','align',1,'labels','on');

full yprojection of the particles according to the orientations in the rectified table

Lets look at the z-projection. In this case we project only the central slices around the crown and the aperture in the viral vesicle, chosing thus slices 60 to 70. if project the full particle, we won't distinguish any features.

figure;dslices('particlesData','t',tr,'projz',60:80,'align',1,'labels','on');

zprojection of the central slices in the rectified table

The depiction clearly shows the missing wedge of the particles. Incidentally, it also shows that averaging all the particles should produce an average that covers all the orientaions in the Fourier space.

Using the membrane to impart an orientation

This section describes an alternative method to compute:

  • a rough orientation of the particles, and
  • a rough first template

In this section we will use the membrane of the mithocondrion to assign a roughly orientation to each of the points in the table. This orientation will be defined by the normal of the closest point in the membrane. The membrane will be defined as a a triangulation, to be constructed based on a set of manually picked points.

Pick membrane points

We open our tomogram in dtmslice

dtmslice @{fhv}1 -prebin 1

in this variant of the syntax of dtmslice, the string @{fhv}1 just means "tomogram number 1 inside catalogue fhv. On the opened scene, we will use a montage to manually click on a set of membrane points.

Opening a montage view

By default, this montage represents slices taken orthogonally to z every 20 pixels of the unbinned tomogram. This can be changed in the settings before opening the montage GUI. Now, we can create a model of type Surface, which we will use to store a set of points in the membrane to be picked manually (or semiautomatically). To do this, go to Active Model > Create new model in pool (choose type) > surface

Creating a surface model

You need to click on the point switcher (the control in the toolbar with a c and an i) to allow entering points. The basic controls are:

  • Mouse click to enter a point.
  • d to delete a point.
  • i to insert a point.
Point switcher must be toggle on to pick points into the model

Use the >> button in the bottom of the GUI to go to next set of orthoslices.

Controls of the montage GUI

Note that the points that you click in the Montage GUI are assigned to a model in the pool, and as such, they appear automatically in the dtmslice GUI

Points clicked in the montage GUI reflect in the tmslice GUI

You also need shift + C in order to place a center inside the mithocondrion. This point is just used to tell Dynamo what is the inside and what is the outside face of the surface that we are building.

shift + C marks an arbitrary interior point

Automatic detection

Once you have clicked points on a level, you can try and check if the automatic tracker can locate them in the next one. To do so, activate the next slice (i.e., secondary click it, so that its frame becomes red), and press o. You can edit the points with d to delete the closest point, m to move the closest point to the position currently under the cursor, or l to delete all the points detected in the slice... in such a case, you probably want to check the tracking parameters before using o again!

Create a surface

Now, we want to convert the points that we have introduced into a triangulation. This is a part of the workflow used to crop particles from membrane models, so we open the workflow GUI for this model in the Active Model menu tab.

Invoking the workflow editor of active model

We can first check the points currently contained in the model, by auxiliary clicking on the first viewing option and choosing the User points option. They will be depicted in a graphic window which will update with the new graphical elements that we depict there.

Showing original points in the model workflow GUI

We first need to create a spline interpolation on each of the levels of our point cloud.

Control points are created by spline interpolation.

Now we define a triangulation on this control points.

Creating a triangulation on the control points

Which can be subdivided to get a smoother appearance, and also a more accurate representation of the geometry.

A single round of subdivision smoothens the appearance of the lattice

Then, we can change the name of the model for clarity, and then save it into the catalogue (with the disk icon in tmslice or the Save into catalogue options under the Active model menu)

Renaming a saving a model into the catalogue

Use the surface to provide orientation

We bring the model into our workspace. We search for it in the catalogue:

dcmodels fhv -nc mySurface -ws output

which will prompt the response

Volume 1. Matching models: 1 (total: 1)
/Users/casdanie/dynamo/examples/fhvParis/fhv/tomograms/volume_1/models/mySurface.omd

now, we can read the model file into our memory space to operate with it:

m = dread(outputFiles{1});

Now the model m is in our space of memory and can be used to impart an orientation to the points in our table.

tOrientedBySurface = dpktbl.triangulation.fillTable(m,'raw.tbl');

In this table, orientations are orthogonal to the membrane (or more precisely, orthogonal to the closest triangle in the mesh that represents the membrane)

figure;dslices('particlesData','t', tOrientedBySurface,'projy','c20','align',1,'labels','on');

[[ |thumb|center|400px| ]]

tConsistent = dynamo_table_flip_normals(tOrientedBySurface,'center',m.center)

figure;dslices('particlesData','t', tConsistent,'projy','c20','align',1,'labels','on');

[[ |thumb|center|400px| ]]

Project for rotational alignment

We have now a template and a coherently defined metadata (i.e. table) that align the particles coarsely along the right direction. We write them into disk:

dwrite(tr,'zOriented.tbl');
dwrite(oz.average,'zOriented.em');

and create a project with these files. Note that the data folder remains unchanged.

dcp.new('zOriented','d','particlesData','template','zOriented.em','masks','default','t','zOriented.tbl');

In this project, we will ask for a symmetrization 'c57'.. this is just to simulate fully rotational symmetry. We are not assuming that this symmetry is physical: we just want to force any possible symmetry axis in the data along the z axis. We also keep binning twice the particles, in order to get the computation times short.

Alignment parameters in zOriented

The result shown an incipient formation of the crown... however, the presence of suspicious striations in a preferential direction might be an indication of the effect of the missing wedge.

Result in zOriented

Project with rotational randomization

We can create a template that does not have a prefererential orintation, by just randomizing the azimuthal rotations in our table, We extract the last refined table into the variable tns

ddb zOriented:rt -r tns 

and impose a perturbation that keeps all other parameters constant but randomly rotates the particles around their axis

tr = dynamo_table_perturbation(tns,'pshift',0,'paxis',0,'pnarot',360);

We can use this table to average again the particles and check the average.

oar = daverage('particlesData','t',tr,'fc',1);
dview(oar)

Now, we can write these files in disk and create a project:

dwrite(oar.average,'randomizedAverage.em');
dwrite(tr,'randomized.tbl');
dcp.new('zRandomized','d','particlesData','template','randomizedAverage.em','masks','default','t','randomized.tbl');

After running this projects, the presence of a crown-like is very, very faintly hinted in mapview:

ddb zRandomized:a -m
Alignment parameters in localized project

and barely identifialble in Chimera:

Alignment parameters in localized project

Project for localized alignment

We don't see clearly what is happening on the area of interest... On one hand we know that we are using a very reduced number of particles ( which on top of it are too similarly oriented). But there is still some room to improve in the approach: we can focus the refinement in the area of interest.

Creating a tight mask

We want to create a mask that encloses the area of interest. To this end, we open the average in dmapview, by transferring it from dview (Export) or just asking ddb to pass the average directly to mapview

ddb zRandomized:a -m

We tune the browser for viewing along y, and we select one of the central slices. We can use a thickness of several pixels to have a better view.

Then, we select the area that we want to use as seed in this plane to create a revolution solid. We press on [shift] + [s] on the selected slide, letting a new window pop up.

Drawing a revolution mask.

We have to change the default name given by Dynamo to this mask.

 !mv temp_drawn_revolution_mask.em teethMask.em 

and now continue the previous project by transferring the results of zRandomized to a fresh project (lets call it localized)

dynamo_vpr_branch zRandomized localized -b 1 -noise 0

where we insert the tight mask teethMask.em that we just created as alignment mask of the project. Note that we do not want impose any symmetry in our parameters:

Alignment parameters in localized project

Let's inspect the output in dview

Last average in project localized as shown by dview

There are different things that we like in this average

  1. The localized masking worked well, producing a clearer insight into the region of relevance
  2. Although we are using signal only inside the mask, the material outside of the mask does 'not become smeared. This is clear mark that the alignment is real and non artifactual. That's an important point to check when we use small masks.
  3. The symmetry in the area becomes apparent on the bare eye. They can be distinguished clearly with mapview and even in Chimera.
Last average in project localized as shown by mapview
Last average in project localized as shown by mapview


Subboxing

The subboxing technique consists in redefining the area of interest inside a previously defined average. In this example, we have use the full crowns as the subject of alignment and averaging. This has allowed us to use the whole signal carried by the full crown on each of the particles to drive the alignment robustly. This approach, however, will not allow us to identify heterogeneity and flexibility inside the individual crowns. Additionally, the possible hetereogeneity inside the crown will decrease the quality of the alignment when the crown is treated as a whole.

With the subboxing technique, we can use our previous results to setup an approach that centers the alignment on the individual teeth. Each one the particles in our new data set will be a subbox (a tooth) extracted from the previos box (the crown) using the alignment parametes for the full boxes gained by the projects that we have ran so far.

Defining a subboxed subunit

First, we need to define the location that we want to subbox. We use mapview

dmapview localized:a 

to show the last average in the project localized

Selecting the center of the tooth subunit with mapview

You probably want to explore several views in mapviews (x'/'y' and 'z') to make sure you (roughtly) hit the center of the subunit of interest. Guiding yourself only for a view on z can be misleading.

Selecting the center of the tooth subunit with mapview on the y view

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As we are in this browser, we can check the size of the subunit that we want to subbox, using the two markers C and N. This will be useful later when we want to actually crop physical particles using dtcrop, when we will be required to input a sidelength for the subboxed data folder.

Measuring distances in mapview

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We define a variable to contain the position that we read in mapview for the blue (North) anchor.

rSubunitFromCenter = [88,80,53 ] - [64,64,64]; 

We subtract the half sidelength of the full box, because the next command will need the position of the asymmetrical unit expressed in relation to center of the box.

Creating a subboxing table

We extract the last refined table:

ddb localized:rt -r t

and define positions related by C12 symmetry along the axis

ts = dynamo_subboxing_table(t,rSubunitFromCenter,'sym','c12');

The new subboxed table ts will have 12 times as many rows as the original one. The system of reference on each particle will point z in the direction of its original box, but the x and y orientations of each tooth will be symmetrically related in the same crown. We can depict this geometrical relationship by plotting a sketch of all the particles in the table:

figure;dtplot(ts,'m','sketch','sketch_length',100,'sm',30);view(-151,12);axis equal;
Sketch of orientations of the new subboxed table ts</ts>

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Creating a subboxed data folder

Now we have all we need to go back to the original tomogram and crop the subboxed particles into a new data folder using the sidelength that we checked with mapview:

dtcrop('crop.rec',ts,'subboxData',32);

We can run our typical sanity check to ensure that everything ran correctly

osb = daverage('subboxData','t',ts,'fc',1);
Density map of the average of subboxed teeth

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As it looks like we expected, we just write it into a file, which we will use to define a new project.

dwrite(osb.average,'subboxRaw.em');

Defining masks

There are some tools to quickly format masks for project. If we want to check a reasonable radius for our mask, we can use the dsphere command and overlay the created mask on the template

cs = dynamo_sphere(10,32);
figure;dslices(osb.average,'y','ov',cs,'ovas','mask');
figure;dslices(osb.average,'ov',cs,'ovas','mask'); 
Testing the radius of created masks by overlay on template

.

In fact, this mask is probably too risky: we need a minimum of signal to drive the alignment

dwrite(cs,'maskTooth32.em');

Subboxing project

We create the project through:

dcp.new('subboxBig','d','subboxData','template','subboxRaw.em','masks','default','t','subboxData/crop.tbl','show',0);

In this case, we use 'show' 0 would suppress the dcm GUI. We use typically this option when we want to enter project parameters through the command line. This is exactly equivalent to entering parameters through the GUI.

dvput subboxBig mask maskTooth32.em
dvput subboxBig ite_r1 3
dvput subboxBig cr_r1 4
dvput subboxBig cs_r1 2
dvput subboxBig ir_r1 4
dvput subboxBig is_r1 2
dvput subboxBig rf_r1 2
dvput subboxBig rff_r1 2
dvput subboxBig dim_r1 32
dvput subboxBig lim_r1 [4,4,4]
dvput subboxBig limm_r1 1 

A list of the names of the parameters can be displayed through the command dvhelp

After running the project, we can check the effect of the independent refinement of the "tooth" units:

ddb subboxBig:a:ite=[0,3] -m 
Slice-to-slice comparison of initial template and final average of the subboxing project

.

or send the average to Chimera through:

ddb subboxBig:a -c

Density map of the average of subboxed teeth after refinement

.