UCSF Chimera (or simply Chimera) is an extensible program for interactive visualization and analysis of molecular structures and related data, including density maps, supramolecular assemblies, sequence alignments, docking results, trajectories, and conformational ensembles.[1] High-quality images and movies can be created. Chimera includes complete documentation and can be downloaded free of charge for noncommercial use.
Chimera is developed by the Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics (RBVI) at the University of California, San Francisco. Development is partially supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIGMS grant P41-GM103311).
The next-generation program is UCSF ChimeraX.[2]
General structure analysis
automatic identification of atom
hydrogen addition and partial charge assignment
high-quality hydrogen bond, contact, and clash detection
molecular dynamics trajectory playback (many formats), distance and angle plots
morphing between conformations of a protein or even different proteins
display of attributes (B-factor, hydrophobicity, etc.) with colors, radii, "worms"
easy creation of custom attributes with simple text file inputs
ViewDock tool to facilitate interactive screening of docking results
rich set of commands, powerful specification syntax
many formats read, PDB and Mol2 written
Web and fetch from Protein Data Bank, CATH or SCOP (domains), EDS (density maps), EMDB (density maps), ModBase (comparative models), CASTp (protein pocket measurements), Pub3D (small molecule structures), VIPERdb (icosahedral virus capsids), UniProt (protein sequences with feature annotations), others