Welcome! I'll try to provide a summary which is more-or-less applicable to you. This comes from my matching experience and watching the interviewees now. Also, of course, the zillion posts about this kind of thing here:
1) Unless you have some sort of absolute man-hate b1tchne$$ about you, you're pretty much assured to match somewhere <see #7 below>
2) Femaleness helps you a ton, I know at my program (like some others), there's a real push to recruit good Orthogals
3) Scores good
4) Not sure about how important the clinical grades are, but winding up in the top 25% of your class overall is a plus and if you don't people will ask why
5) Having any research is a good show of faith and conversation topic
6) AOA no biggie. They'll read your app and ask you at your interview why you weren't AOA and you can say "I have no idea", shrug with a smirk, and you'll be golden. Everyone knows it's very political at many places. Besides, you can't change this now for it to matter, so make the most of your other assets.
7) Rotations can be good or bad. Much is (unfortunately) expected of you as a girl, and many people will watch you closely to see if you "can hang". No, it's not fair, I'm just giving advice. On the other hand, we had a female rotator that kicked the guys' butts, and, independent of her scores (we didn't know what they were and didn't care), and ranked her at the top. Your situation is a little unique as I often find myself giving useless advice here on rotations and the like, but since your safety net is probably going to be pretty wide, ie you'll get interviews at many places where you didn't rotate simply because of your reasonably-strong Step 1 and gender. So, you might as well rotate at your top places, since you should have plenty of others which will invite you sight-unseen. If you were 225 then I'd say take a conservative month and rock it, but that's not your case.
I welcome comments/rebuttals.