Thanks for the follow-up, which makes your point clearer. Let's proceed step-by-step.
1-I need to visualize triplex DNA via 3DNA.
Explanation:3DNA is a software tool for the visualization of 3-dimensional nucleic acid structures. My designed DNA sequence (5'-AAGGAAGAAG TTTA CTTCTTCCTT CTTG TTCCTTCTTC-3') was single strand and could form triple helix via Waston-Crick hydrogen bond and Hoogsteen hydrogen bond. The base pair is shown as follow. In the Figure, the round dots represent Waston-Crick hydrogen and the square dots represents the Hoogsteen hydrogen bond.
Based on your attached image, you could use the 3DNA
fiber program to build the triplex part, as a
starting point. Type
fiber -m for available models (especially model #31 (or #30)). That's what the citation you referred to was talking about (as I understand).
See the
3DNA 2003 NAR paper, especially the section titled "MODEL BUILDING". In the 2008 3DNA Nature Protocols paper, pay attention to Box 6:
BOX 6 | FIBER-DIFFRACTION MODELS
The fiber program within 3DNA provides handy access to 55 fiber models of DNA and RNA helices in various polymorphic forms (e.g., A-, B-, C-DNA and so on) and stoichiometries (e.g., single-stranded, double-stranded, triplexes, quadruplexes and DNA–RNA hybrids). The program generates structure files in standard PDB format, with the ‘-xml’ option allowing for structural output in the new Protein Data Bank Markup Language72, a format especially useful for very large structures that exceed the five-digit atom serial number limit and/or the fixed (f8.3) Cartesian-coordinate formatting limit of PDB files. To the best of our knowledge, the collection of fiber models in 3DNA is the most comprehensive of its kind. In preparing this set of fiber models, we have taken great care to ensure the accuracy and consistency of the models. For completeness and user verification, 3DNA includes, in addition to 3DNA-processed files, the original coordinates collected from the literature. Whereas the 3DNA-processed repeating unit is necessary to construct full, atomic-level representations of the models, the structurally equivalent PDB files of the repeating units, expressed in standard base reference frame, prove useful as building blocks when a user wishes to generate a perturbed base-only fiber model, such as an overstretched duplex with variable rise at successive steps.
If you want to proceed with 3DNA, please become familiar with the 3DNA
fiber command. Of course, you may well want to try some other modeling tools, such as NAB (Nucleic Acid Builder), or the many the start-of-the-art RNA modeling tools, as in the RNA-Puzzles game.
Xiang-Jun