Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Leighton Coates is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Leighton Coates.


Protist | 2004

Enzymes for heme biosynthesis are found in both the mitochondrion and plastid of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum.

Shigeharu Sato; Barbara Clough; Leighton Coates; R.J.M. Wilson

All eight enzymes required for de novo heme biosynthesis have been predicted from the nuclear genome of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. We have studied the subcellular localization of three of these using a GFP reporter in live transfected parasites. The first enzyme in the pathway delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase (ALAS) is targeted to the mitochondrion, but the next two enzymes porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) and hydroxymethylbilane synthase (HMBS) are targeted to the plastid. An enzymatically active recombinant version of PBGS from P. falciparum was over-expressed and its activity found to be stimulated by Mg2+ (and enhanced by Mn2+) but not by Zn2+. A hypothetical scheme for the exchange of intermediates in heme biosynthesis between the mitochondrion and plastid organelle, as well as organelle attachment is discussed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

The catalytic mechanism of an aspartic proteinase explored with neutron and X-ray diffraction.

Leighton Coates; Han-Fang Tuan; Stephen J. Tomanicek; Andrey Kovalevsky; Marat Mustyakimov; Peter T. Erskine; J. B. Cooper

Hydrogen atoms play key roles in enzyme mechanism, but as this study shows, even high-quality X-ray data to a resolution of 1 A cannot directly visualize them. Neutron diffraction, however, can locate deuterium atoms even at resolutions around 2 A. Both neutron and X-ray diffraction data have been used to investigate the transition state of the aspartic proteinase endothiapepsin. The different techniques reveal a different part of the story, revealing the clearest picture yet of the catalytic mechanism by which the enzyme operates. Room temperature neutron and X-ray diffraction data were used in a newly developed joint refinement software package to visualize deuterium atoms within the active site of the enzyme when a gem-diol transition state analogue inhibitor is bound at the active site. These data were also used to estimate their individual occupancy, while analysis of the differences between the bond lengths of the catalytic aspartates was performed using atomic resolution X-ray data. The two methods are in agreement on the protonation state of the active site with a transition state analogue inhibitor bound confirming the catalytic mechanism at which the enzyme operates.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2005

High-resolution structure of myo-inositol monophosphatase, the putative target of lithium therapy

Raj Gill; Fiyaz Mohammed; Rajji Badyal; Leighton Coates; Peter T. Erskine; Darren Thompson; Jonathan B. Cooper; Michael G. Gore; S.P. Wood

Inositol monophosphatase is a key enzyme of the phosphatidylinositol signalling pathway and the putative target of the mood-stabilizing drug lithium. The crystal structure of bovine inositol monophosphatase has been determined at 1.4 A resolution in complex with the physiological magnesium ion ligands. Three magnesium ions are octahedrally coordinated at the active site of each of the two subunits of the inositol monophosphatase dimer and a detailed three-metal mechanism is proposed. Ligands to the three metals include the side chains of Glu70, Asp90, Asp93 and Asp220, the backbone carbonyl group of Ile92 and several solvent molecules, including the proposed nucleophilic water molecule (W1) ligated by both Mg-1 and Mg-3. Modelling of the phosphate moiety of inositol monophosphate to superpose the axial phosphate O atoms onto three active-site water molecules orientates the phosphoester bond for in-line attack by the nucleophilic water which is activated by Thr95. Modelling of the pentacoordinate transition state suggests that the 6-OH group of the inositol moiety stabilizes the developing negative charge by hydrogen bonding to a phosphate O atom. Modelling of the post-reaction complex suggests a role for a second water molecule (W2) ligated by Mg-2 and Asp220 in protonating the departing inositolate. This second water molecule is absent in related structures in which lithium is bound at site 2, providing a rationale for enzyme inhibition by this simple monovalent cation. The higher resolution structural information on the active site of inositol monophosphatase will facilitate the design of substrate-based inhibitors and aid in the development of better therapeutic agents for bipolar disorder (manic depression).


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Neutron diffraction studies of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase complexed with methotrexate.

Brad C. Bennett; Paul Langan; Leighton Coates; Marat Mustyakimov; Benno P. Schoenborn; Elizabeth E. Howell; Chris Dealwis

Hydrogen atoms play a central role in many biochemical processes yet are difficult to visualize by x-ray crystallography. Spallation neutron sources provide a new arena for protein crystallography with TOF measurements enhancing data collection efficiency and allowing hydrogen atoms to be located in smaller crystals of larger biological macromolecules. Here we report a 2.2-Å resolution neutron structure of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) in complex with methotrexate (MTX). Neutron data were collected on a 0.3-mm3 D2O-soaked crystal at the Los Alamos Neutron Scattering Center. This study provides an example of using spallation neutrons to study protein dynamics, to identify protonation states directly from nuclear density maps, and to analyze solvent structure. Our structure reveals that the occluded loop conformation [monomer (mon.) A] of the DHFR·MTX complex undergoes greater H/D exchange compared with the closed-loop conformer (mon. B), partly because the Met-20 and β(F-G) loops readily exchange in mon. A. The eight-stranded β sheet of both DHFR molecules resists H/D exchange more than the helices and loops. However, the C-terminal strand, βH, in mon. A is almost fully exchanged. Several D2Os form hydrogen bonds with exchanged amides. At the active site, the N1 atom of MTX is protonated and thus charged when bound to DHFR. Several D2Os are observed at hydrophobic surfaces, including two pockets near the MTX-binding site. A previously unidentified D2O hydrogen bonds with the catalytic D27 in mon. B, stabilizing its negative charge.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2005

The Atomic Resolution Structure of Methanol Dehydrogenase from Methylobacterium Extorquens

Paul Williams; Leighton Coates; Fiyaz Mohammed; Raj Gill; Peter T. Erskine; Alun R. Coker; S.P. Wood; Christopher Anthony; J. B. Cooper

The crystal structure of methanol dehydrogenase (MDH) from Methylobacterium extorquens has been refined without stereochemical restraints at a resolution of 1.2 A. The high-resolution data have defined the conformation of the tricyclic pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) cofactor ring as entirely planar. The detailed definition of the active-site geometry has shown many features that are similar to the quinohaemo-protein alcohol dehydrogenases from Comamonas testosteroni and Pseudomonas putida, both of which possess MDH-like and cytochrome c-like domains. Conserved features between the two types of PQQ-containing enzyme suggest a common pathway for electron transfer between MDH and its physiological electron acceptor cytochrome cL. A pathway for proton transfer from the active site to the bulk solvent is also suggested.


Biochemistry | 2011

A Structural Study of Norovirus 3C Protease Specificity: Binding of a Designed Active Site-Directed Peptide Inhibitor

Robert Hussey; Leighton Coates; Raj Gill; Peter T. Erskine; Shu-Fen Coker; Ed Mitchell; Jonathan B. Cooper; Steve P. Wood; Robert Broadbridge; Ian N. Clarke; Paul R. Lambden; Peter M. Shoolingin-Jordan

Noroviruses are the major cause of human epidemic nonbacterial gastroenteritis. Viral replication requires a 3C cysteine protease that cleaves a 200 kDa viral polyprotein into its constituent functional proteins. Here we describe the X-ray structure of the Southampton norovirus 3C protease (SV3CP) bound to an active site-directed peptide inhibitor (MAPI) which has been refined at 1.7 Å resolution. The inhibitor, acetyl-Glu-Phe-Gln-Leu-Gln-X, which is based on the most rapidly cleaved recognition sequence in the 200 kDa polyprotein substrate, reacts covalently through its propenyl ethyl ester group (X) with the active site nucleophile, Cys 139. The structure permits, for the first time, the identification of substrate recognition and binding groups in a noroviral 3C protease and thus provides important new information for the development of antiviral prophylactics.


Biochemistry | 2008

Hydrogen location in stages of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction: time-of-flight neutron structure of D-xylose isomerase with bound D-xylulose

Andrey Kovalevsky; Amy K. Katz; H. L. Carrell; Leif Hanson; Marat Mustyakimov; S. Zoë Fisher; Leighton Coates; Benno P. Schoenborn; Gerard J. Bunick; Jenny P. Glusker; Paul Langan

The time-of-flight neutron Laue technique has been used to determine the location of hydrogen atoms in the enzyme d-xylose isomerase (XI). The neutron structure of crystalline XI with bound product, d-xylulose, shows, unexpectedly, that O5 of d-xylulose is not protonated but is hydrogen-bonded to doubly protonated His54. Also, Lys289, which is neutral in native XI, is protonated (positively charged), while the catalytic water in native XI has become activated to a hydroxyl anion which is in the proximity of C1 and C2, the molecular site of isomerization of xylose. These findings impact our understanding of the reaction mechanism.


Plant Physiology | 2016

A Structural Study of CESA1 Catalytic Domain of Arabidopsis Cellulose Synthesis Complex: Evidence for CESA Trimers

Venu Gopal Vandavasi; Daniel K. Putnam; Qiu Zhang; Loukas Petridis; William T. Heller; B. Tracy Nixon; Candace H. Haigler; Udaya C. Kalluri; Leighton Coates; Paul Langan; Jeremy C. Smith; Jens Meiler; Hugh O'Neill

Assembly into stable trimers provides strong evidence for 18 protein subunits to assemble in a cellulose synthesis complex that synthesizes an 18-chain cellulose microfibril. A cellulose synthesis complex with a “rosette” shape is responsible for synthesis of cellulose chains and their assembly into microfibrils within the cell walls of land plants and their charophyte algal progenitors. The number of cellulose synthase proteins in this large multisubunit transmembrane protein complex and the number of cellulose chains in a microfibril have been debated for many years. This work reports a low resolution structure of the catalytic domain of CESA1 from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; AtCESA1CatD) determined by small-angle scattering techniques and provides the first experimental evidence for the self-assembly of CESA into a stable trimer in solution. The catalytic domain was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and using a two-step procedure, it was possible to isolate monomeric and trimeric forms of AtCESA1CatD. The conformation of monomeric and trimeric AtCESA1CatD proteins were studied using small-angle neutron scattering and small-angle x-ray scattering. A series of AtCESA1CatD trimer computational models were compared with the small-angle x-ray scattering trimer profile to explore the possible arrangement of the monomers in the trimers. Several candidate trimers were identified with monomers oriented such that the newly synthesized cellulose chains project toward the cell membrane. In these models, the class-specific region is found at the periphery of the complex, and the plant-conserved region forms the base of the trimer. This study strongly supports the “hexamer of trimers” model for the rosette cellulose synthesis complex that synthesizes an 18-chain cellulose microfibril as its fundamental product.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2010

The macromolecular neutron diffractometer (MaNDi) at the Spallation Neutron Source, Oak Ridge: enhanced optics design, high‐resolution neutron detectors and simulated diffraction

Leighton Coates; Alexandru Dan Stoica; Christina Hoffmann; J. Richards; R. Cooper

The macromolecular neutron diffractometer MaNDi is currently under construction at the first target station of the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. This instrument will collect neutron diffraction data from small single crystals (0.1–1 mm3) with lattice constants between 100 and 300 A, as well as data from less well ordered systems such as fibers. A focusing neutron guide has been designed to filter the high-energy neutron component of the spectrum and to provide a narrow beam with a wide spectral window and angular divergence almost insensitive to neutron wavelength. The system includes a final interchangeable section of neutron guide and two slits, which enable tuning of the horizontal and vertical beam divergence between 0.12 and 0.80° (full width at half-maximum) at the sample position. This allows the trading of intensity for resolution, depending on the scientific requirements. Efforts to enhance and develop suitable high-resolution neutron detectors at an affordable price are also discussed. Finally, the parameters of the neutron guide and detectors were used to simulate diffraction from a large unit cell.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Genetically Encoded Fragment-Based Discovery of Glycopeptide Ligands for Carbohydrate-Binding Proteins

Simon Ng; Edith Y. Lin; Pavel I. Kitov; Katrina F. Tjhung; Oksana Gerlits; Lu Deng; Brian T. Kasper; Amika Sood; Beth M. Paschal; Ping Zhang; Chang-Chun Ling; John S. Klassen; Christopher J. Noren; Lara K. Mahal; Robert J. Woods; Leighton Coates; Ratmir Derda

We describe an approach to accelerate the search for competitive inhibitors for carbohydrate-recognition domains (CRDs). Genetically encoded fragment-based discovery (GE-FBD) uses selection of phage-displayed glycopeptides to dock a glycan fragment at the CRD and guide selection of synergistic peptide motifs adjacent to the CRD. Starting from concanavalin A (ConA), a mannose (Man)-binding protein, as a bait, we narrowed a library of 10(8) glycopeptides to 86 leads that share a consensus motif, Man-WYD. Validation of synthetic leads yielded Man-WYDLF that exhibited 40-50-fold enhancement in affinity over methyl α-d-mannopyranoside (MeMan). Lectin array suggested specificity: Man-WYD derivative bound only to 3 out of 17 proteins—ConA, LcH, and PSA—that bind to Man. An X-ray structure of ConA:Man-WYD proved that the trimannoside core and Man-WYD exhibit identical CRD docking, but their extra-CRD binding modes are significantly different. Still, they have comparable affinity and selectivity for various Man-binding proteins. The intriguing observation provides new insight into functional mimicry of carbohydrates by peptide ligands. GE-FBD may provide an alternative to rapidly search for competitive inhibitors for lectins.

Collaboration


Dive into the Leighton Coates's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin L. Weiss

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul Langan

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrey Kovalevsky

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S.P. Wood

University College London

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raj Gill

University of Southampton

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joseph D. Ng

University of Alabama in Huntsville

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stephen J. Tomanicek

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge