Hi Tiru,

If the center of symmetry is at 0,0,0 for your model and it just needs 6 rotated copies placed use Chimera command

sym #0 group c6

where #0 is the model number of your monomer.  If you do not know the center of symmetry or how the monomers interface with each other (ie their orientation in the hexamer), then that is a protein-protein docking problem and the sym command does not solve that.  For that case you would need to fit in a cryoEM or X-ray map of the hexamer, or align the monomer to a known homologous hexamer, or find some amazing oligomeric structure prediction tool.

Tom




On Sep 1, 2021, at 11:24 AM, Tiru Hcu <tiru.hcu09@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi Tom, 

Thank you for your response. My protein symmetry is a hexamer. Please would you mind sharing a little elaborate how to to do in chimera. Thank you. 

Best regards,
Tiru

On Wed, 1 Sep 2021, 21:10 Tom Goddard via Chimera-users, <chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu> wrote:
Hi Smith,

Do you know the symmetry of the oligomer you are trying to make?  Is it just a matter of applying positions that you already know?  Or do you need some computational protein-protein docking to figure it out (a vastly harder problem)?  If you know the symmetry you want the Chimera and ChimeraX sym command can place copies of a structure using standard symmetries or a list of position matrices (rotation + translation).

tom


On Sep 1, 2021, at 1:29 AM, tim smith via Chimera-users <chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu> wrote:

Thank you, Elaine and Kevin, for your response. 
The Rosetta Symmetry docking is up to 400 amino acids, and mine is 800. I can't use it as it is. Wondering there is any other server for predicting symmetry. 

Thank you. 

Best 
Smith

On Tue, Aug 31, 2021 at 7:02 PM Kevin Jude <kjude@stanford.edu> wrote:
 Hi Smith, you can use Rosetta Symmetric Docking. It's available on the ROSIE server


--
Kevin Jude, PhD (he/him/his)
Structural Biology Research Specialist, Garcia Lab
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Stanford University School of Medicine
Beckman B177, 279 Campus Drive, Stanford CA 94305

On Tue, Aug 31, 2021 at 4:30 AM tim smith via Chimera-users <chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu> wrote:
Hi All,
Apologies for the nonrelated question!!

Wondering if there are any tools (can make in chimera/chimerax/Pymol) that predict or build protein oligomers based on alphfold structure.   Please let me know. I will be grateful for your kind responses. Thank you 

Best
Smith
_______________________________________________
Chimera-users mailing list: Chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu
Manage subscription: https://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/mailman/listinfo/chimera-users
_______________________________________________
Chimera-users mailing list: Chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu
Manage subscription: https://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/mailman/listinfo/chimera-users

_______________________________________________
Chimera-users mailing list: Chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu
Manage subscription: https://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/mailman/listinfo/chimera-users