Hi Pooja,
Thanks for using 3DNA and writing such a thoughtful post. I think I understand your question, even though I do not have (or know of) a straight answer to it.
As you tried out, '[mono:1hmzqauk]rebuild[/mono:1hmzqauk]' with the [mono:1hmzqauk]-atomic[/mono:1hmzqauk] option does not generate proper sugar-phosphate backbone geometry for intercalated dinucleotide steps. Meanwhile, the available "complexes deposited in PDB are limited to hexanucleotide sequence and mostly the ligand intercalated in the terminal dinucleotide step." However, by combining the two, plus other utilities in 3DNA, it'd be possible to achieve approximately what you want.
You could start with a PDB complex with an intercalated dinucleotide step and then extend both ends with desired sequence in B-DNA fiber conformation. The intercalated dinucleotide can then be mutated to whatever bases you like, using [red:1hmzqauk]mutate_bp[/red:1hmzqauk] or [red:1hmzqauk]mutate_bases[/red:1hmzqauk] (see my reply to "
change one base pair in a double-strand DNA structure file").
Surely, this is not an automatic process; there is no GUI-driven menu and mouse clicks to achieve 'magic' -- you have to know what to do for each step. However, if you cannot find a better method elsewhere, 3DNA may prove useful. Please share your experience and thought. If you decide to try the 3DNA route, please provide a specific example.
HTH,
Xiang-Jun