Hi,
Thanks for using 3DNA and posting your questions on the Forum. Attaching a PDB file is especially helpful in identifying where the problem is.
the primary structure is about 400 base pairs. when I feed it to X3DNA it just recognize 75 base pairs and not the rest.
This is normally due to fact that your presumed base-pairs are out of norm as would be expected by 3DNA's already generous criteria by default. For example if the shortest 'H-bond' distance between two bases is > 4.0 Å, 3DNA would
not take them as forming a pair (in the default settings -- see file
config/misc_3dna.par). An example case for G40-C761 is shown below. Note the long distances for base-base H-bonds.
Whenever 3DNA 'fails' to identify a pair, it is worth checking carefully for abnormality in the analyzed structure. In your case, you started with a CG model, and then built an atomic model using NAB. So I won't be surprised if there are irregularities in the resultant structure. Normally, by visualizing your structure in Jmol or PyMOL, you'll be able to notice clearly some issues.
***Warning: structure with overlapped base-pairs***
The message means that two base-pairs identified by 3DNA are overlapped in 3D. I am aware of one such erroneous entry in the PDB. In your case, however, it may well be due to the 'coarse' nature of your model.
This structure contains intra-chain direction reverse
Again, it could be due to abnormality in your structure.
Could you run AMBER or another tool to 'regulate' your structure?
Xiang-Jun