Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Joseph E. Coyle is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Joseph E. Coyle.


Nature | 2012

Serine is a natural ligand and allosteric activator of pyruvate kinase M2

Barbara Chaneton; Petra Hillmann; Liang Zheng; Agnes C. L. Martin; Oliver D.K. Maddocks; Achuthanunni Chokkathukalam; Joseph E. Coyle; Andris Jankevics; Finn P. Holding; Karen H. Vousden; Christian Frezza; Marc O'Reilly; Eyal Gottlieb

Cancer cells exhibit several unique metabolic phenotypes that are critical for cell growth and proliferation. Specifically, they overexpress the M2 isoform of the tightly regulated enzyme pyruvate kinase (PKM2), which controls glycolytic flux, and are highly dependent on de novo biosynthesis of serine and glycine. Here we describe a new rheostat-like mechanistic relationship between PKM2 activity and serine biosynthesis. We show that serine can bind to and activate human PKM2, and that PKM2 activity in cells is reduced in response to serine deprivation. This reduction in PKM2 activity shifts cells to a fuel-efficient mode in which more pyruvate is diverted to the mitochondria and more glucose-derived carbon is channelled into serine biosynthesis to support cell proliferation.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Discovery of (2,4-Dihydroxy-5-isopropylphenyl)-[5-(4-methylpiperazin-1-ylmethyl)-1,3-dihydroisoindol-2-yl]methanone (AT13387), a Novel Inhibitor of the Molecular Chaperone Hsp90 by Fragment Based Drug Design

Andrew James Woodhead; Hayley Angove; Maria Grazia Carr; Gianni Chessari; Miles Congreve; Joseph E. Coyle; Jose Cosme; Brent Graham; Philip J. Day; Robert Downham; Lynsey Fazal; Ruth Feltell; Eva Figueroa; Martyn Frederickson; Jonathan Lewis; Rachel McMenamin; Christopher W. Murray; M. Alistair O’Brien; Lina Parra; Sahil Patel; Theresa Rachel Phillips; David C. Rees; Sharna J. Rich; Donna-Michelle Smith; Gary Trewartha; Mladen Vinkovic; Brian Williams; Alison Jo-Anne Woolford

Inhibitors of the molecular chaperone heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) are currently generating significant interest in clinical development as potential treatments for cancer. In a preceding publication (DOI: 10.1021/jm100059d ) we describe Astexs approach to screening fragments against Hsp90 and the subsequent optimization of two hits into leads with inhibitory activities in the low nanomolar range. This paper describes the structure guided optimization of the 2,4-dihydroxybenzamide lead molecule 1 and details some of the drug discovery strategies employed in the identification of AT13387 (35), which has progressed through preclinical development and is currently being tested in man.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Fragment-Based Drug Discovery Applied to Hsp90. Discovery of Two Lead Series with High Ligand Efficiency.

Christopher W. Murray; Maria Grazia Carr; Owen Callaghan; Gianni Chessari; Miles Congreve; Suzanna Cowan; Joseph E. Coyle; Robert Downham; E Figueroa; Martyn Frederickson; Brent Graham; Rachel McMenamin; Michael Alistair O'brien; Sahil Patel; Theresa Rachel Phillips; Glyn Williams; Andrew James Woodhead; Alison Jo-Anne Woolford

Inhibitors of the chaperone Hsp90 are potentially useful as chemotherapeutic agents in cancer. This paper describes an application of fragment screening to Hsp90 using a combination of NMR and high throughput X-ray crystallography. The screening identified an aminopyrimidine with affinity in the high micromolar range and subsequent structure-based design allowed its optimization into a low nanomolar series with good ligand efficiency. A phenolic chemotype was also identified in fragment screening and was found to bind with affinity close to 1 mM. This fragment was optimized using structure based design into a resorcinol lead which has subnanomolar affinity for Hsp90, excellent cell potency, and good ligand efficiency. This fragment to lead campaign improved affinity for Hsp90 by over 1,000,000-fold with the addition of only six heavy atoms. The companion paper (DOI: 10.1021/jm100060b) describes how the resorcinol lead was optimized into a compound that is now in clinical trials for the treatment of cancer.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2010

Higher Throughput Calorimetry: Opportunities, Approaches and Challenges

Francisco E. Torres; Michael I. Recht; Joseph E. Coyle; Richard H. Bruce; Glyn Williams

Higher throughput thermodynamic measurements can provide value in structure-based drug discovery during fragment screening, hit validation, and lead optimization. Enthalpy can be used to detect and characterize ligand binding, and changes that affect the interaction of protein and ligand can sometimes be detected more readily from changes in the enthalpy of binding than from the corresponding free-energy changes or from protein-ligand structures. Newer, higher throughput calorimeters are being incorporated into the drug discovery process. Improvements in titration calorimeters come from extensions of a mature technology and face limitations in scaling. Conversely, array calorimetry, an emerging technology, shows promise for substantial improvements in throughput and material utilization, but improved sensitivity is needed.


ChemMedChem | 2014

Crystal structure of human soluble adenylate cyclase reveals a distinct, highly flexible allosteric bicarbonate binding pocket.

Susanne Maria Saalau-Bethell; Valerio Berdini; Anne Cleasby; Miles Stuart Congreve; Joseph E. Coyle; Victoria Lock; Christopher W. Murray; M Alistair O'Brien; Sharna J. Rich; Tracey Sambrook; Mladen Vinkovic; Jeff Yon; Harren Jhoti

Soluble adenylate cyclases catalyse the synthesis of the second messenger cAMP through the cyclisation of ATP and are the only known enzymes to be directly activated by bicarbonate. Here, we report the first crystal structure of the human enzyme that reveals a pseudosymmetrical arrangement of two catalytic domains to produce a single competent active site and a novel discrete bicarbonate binding pocket. Crystal structures of the apo protein, the protein in complex with α,β‐methylene adenosine 5′‐triphosphate (AMPCPP) and calcium, with the allosteric activator bicarbonate, and also with a number of inhibitors identified using fragment screening, all show a flexible active site that undergoes significant conformational changes on binding of ligands. The resulting nanomolar‐potent inhibitors that were developed bind at both the substrate binding pocket and the allosteric site, and can be used as chemical probes to further elucidate the function of this protein.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Fragment-Based Discovery of Type I Inhibitors of Maternal Embryonic Leucine Zipper Kinase

Christopher N. Johnson; Valerio Berdini; Lijs Beke; Pascal Bonnet; Dirk Brehmer; Joseph E. Coyle; Phillip J. Day; Martyn Frederickson; Eddy Jean Edgard Freyne; Ron Gilissen; Christopher Charles Frederick Hamlett; Steven Howard; Lieven Meerpoel; Rachel McMenamin; Sahil Patel; David C. Rees; Andrew Sharff; Francois Maria Sommen; Tongfei Wu; Joannes Theodorus Maria Linders

Fragment-based drug design was successfully applied to maternal embryonic leucine zipper kinase (MELK). A low affinity (160 μM) fragment hit was identified, which bound to the hinge region with an atypical binding mode, and this was optimized using structure-based design into a low-nanomolar and cell-penetrant inhibitor, with a good selectivity profile, suitable for use as a chemical probe for elucidation of MELK biology.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Structure-Based Design of Type II Inhibitors Applied to Maternal Embryonic Leucine Zipper Kinase

Christopher Norbert Johnson; Christophe Denis Adelinet; Valerio Berdini; Lijs Beke; Pascal Bonnet; Dirk Brehmer; Frederick Calo; Joseph E. Coyle; Phillip J. Day; Martyn Frederickson; Eddy Jean Edgard Freyne; Ron Gilissen; Christopher Charles Frederick Hamlett; Steven Howard; Lieven Meerpoel; Laurence Anne Mevellec; Rachel McMenamin; Elisabeth Thérèse Jeanne Pasquier; Sahil Patel; David C. Rees; Joannes Theodorus Maria Linders

A novel Type II kinase inhibitor chemotype has been identified for maternal embryonic leucine zipper kinase (MELK) using structure-based ligand design. The strategy involved structural characterization of an induced DFG-out pocket by protein-ligand X-ray crystallography and incorporation of a slender linkage capable of bypassing a large gate-keeper residue, thus enabling design of molecules accessing both hinge and induced pocket regions. Optimization of an initial hit led to the identification of a low-nanomolar, cell-penetrant Type II inhibitor suitable for use as a chemical probe for MELK.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Exploitation of a Novel Binding Pocket in Human Lipoprotein-Associated Phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2) Discovered through X-ray Fragment Screening.

Alison Jo-Anne Woolford; Joseph E. Pero; Sridhar Aravapalli; Valerio Berdini; Joseph E. Coyle; Philip J. Day; Andrew M. Dodson; Pascal Grondin; Finn P. Holding; Lydia Y. W. Lee; Peng Li; Eric S. Manas; Joseph P. Marino; Agnes C. L. Martin; Brent W. Mccleland; Rachel McMenamin; Christopher W. Murray; Christopher E. Neipp; Lee W. Page; Vipulkumar Kantibhai Patel; Florent Potvain; Sharna J. Rich; Ralph A. Rivero; Kirsten S. Smith; Donald O. Somers; Lionel Trottet; Ranganadh Velagaleti; Glyn Williams; Ren Xie

Elevated levels of human lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2) are associated with cardiovascular disease and dementia. A fragment screen was conducted against Lp-PLA2 in order to identify novel inhibitors. Multiple fragment hits were observed in different regions of the active site, including some hits that bound in a pocket created by movement of a protein side chain (approximately 13 Å from the catalytic residue Ser273). Using structure guided design, we optimized a fragment that bound in this pocket to generate a novel low nanomolar chemotype, which did not interact with the catalytic residues.


Archive | 2018

Data set accompanying "Application of native ESI-MS to characterize interactions between compounds derived from fragment based discovery campaigns and two pharmaceutically relevant proteins"

Agni F.M. Gavriilidou; Finn P. Holding; Joseph E. Coyle; Renato Zenobi

Native electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) was applied to analyze the binding of compounds generated during fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD) campaigns against two functionally distinct proteins, the X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP) and cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). Compounds of different molecular weights and a wide range of binding affinities obtained from the hits to leads and lead optimization stages of FBDD campaigns were studied, and their dissociation constants (Kd) were measured by native ESI-MS. We demonstrate that native ESI-MS has the potential to be applied to the stages of an FBDD campaign downstream of primary screening for the detection and quantification of protein–ligand binding. Native ESI-MS was used to derive Kd values for compounds binding to XIAP, and the dissociation of the complex between XIAP and a peptide derived from the second mitochondria-derived activator of caspases (SMAC) protein induced by one of the test compounds was also investigated. Affinities of compounds binding to CDK2 gave Kd values in the low nanomolar to low millimolar range, and Kd values generated by MS and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) followed the same trend for both proteins. Practical considerations for the application of native ESI-MS are discussed in detail.


Biochemistry | 2018

Native mass spectrometry gives insight into the allosteric binding mechanism of M2 pyruvate kinase to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate

Agni F.M. Gavriilidou; Finn P. Holding; Daniel Mayer; Joseph E. Coyle; Dmitry B. Veprintsev; Renato Zenobi

The various oligomeric states of the M2 isoform of pyruvate kinase (PKM2) were distinguished using native mass spectrometry. The effect of PKM2 concentration on its dimer-tetramer equilibrium was monitored, and a value for the dissociation constant ( Kd) of the two species was estimated to be 0.95 μM. Results of binding of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) to PKM2 are shown and provide insight into the allosteric mechanism and changes in the oligomerization status of PKM2. The average Kd for binding of FBP to the PKM2 tetramer was estimated to be 7.5 μM. It is concluded that four molecules of FBP bind to the active PKM2 tetramer whereas binding of FBP to the PKM2 dimer was not observed. It is suggested that either FBP potentiates rapid tetramer formation after binding to apo PKM2 dimers or FBP binds to PKM2 apo tetramers, thus driving the dimer-tetramer equilibrium in the direction of fully FBP-bound tetramer. The binding occurs in a highly positively cooperative manner with a Hill coefficient ( n) of 3.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge