I need to amend that and make a couple of corrections, after thinking about it. First, the rotation-translations shouldn't be sensitive to the origin. Second, if it has C4 ("square") symmetry, then you only need one generator (rotation-translation) to make the tetramer, and the two monomers should be adjacent.
If it is T4 ("tetrahedral") symmetry, then you need two generators, with one generator made from a pair of monomers opposite and one generator made from a pair adjacent. James On Jan 10, 2013, at 6:05 PM, James Stroud wrote: > The transformation matrix describing the symmetry is sensitive to the > coordinate system origin. You should center the entire tetramer on the origin > (0, 0, 0), where the origin coincides with the point symmetry element. If > you have a tetramer with true point symmetry, then the center of the tetramer > should be the center of mass. Then you can use lsq-expl from O or whatever > the equivalent is in pymol, phenix, or coot to get the transformation matrix > between any two monomers. > > Repeated application of that transformation matrix to any monomer of the > tetramer should generate the tetramer. > > James > > On Jan 10, 2013, at 5:48 PM, james09 pruza wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> Which program outputs the symmetry operator (rotation and translation)? I >> have a dimer in the asymmetric unit and need to know the symmetry operator >> to get a tetramer, the active molecule. >> James >> >