Sirius visualization software
Sirius is a molecular modelling and analysis system developed at San Diego Supercomputer Center. Sirius is designed to support advanced user requirements that go beyond simple display of small molecules and proteins. Sirius supports high quality interactive 3D graphics, structure building, displaying protein or DNA primary sequences, access to remote data sources, and visualizing molecular dynamics trajectories. It can be used for scientific visualization and analysis, and chemistry and biology instruction.
This software is no longer supported as of 2011.
Key features
Sirius supports a variety of applications with a set of features, including:- Building and editing chemical structures using a library of fragments
- Protein structure and sequence alignment
- Command line interpreter and scripting support fully compatible with extant RasMol scripts
- Full support for molecular dynamics trajectory visualizing
- BLAST search directly in Protein Data Bank and Uniprot databases
- Ability to move parts of the loaded data while freezing the rest
- Interactive calculation of hydrogen bonding, steric clashes, Ramachandran plots
- Support for all major structure and sequence formats
- Bundled POV-Ray for creating photorealistic images
- Integrated selection and coloring across individual visualizing components
RasMol-compatible scripting
Sirius features a command line interpreter that can be used to quickly manipulate structure appearance and orientation. The set of commands has been patterned after RasMol, so it's fully compatible with extant scripts. Added commands introduced in Sirius provide support for manipulating multiple structures loaded at the same time, and enable more flexible selection.Extant RasMol scripts can be imported and run within Sirius to produce high quality representations of encoded molecular scenes. Since RasMol uses a coordinate system that differs from that Sirius, internal conversion is performed when RasMol scripts are imported, so that any orientation changes are shown correctly. Any manually entered commands, however, are executed according to the Sirius coordinate system.
Sirius supports several predefined atom-residue sets and color schemes, allows editing of scripts using the Command Panel interface, and logical operators and parentheses can be used to create complex selection commands.