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Paul Emsley

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology

ORCID: 0000-0002-0138-5227

Publishes on Enzyme Structure and Function, Protein Structure and Dynamics, Glycosylation and Glycoproteins Research. 77 papers and 80.6k citations.

77Publications
80.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

<i>Coot</i>: model-building tools for molecular graphics
Paul Emsley, Kevin Cowtan|Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography|2004
Cited by 31.3kOpen Access

CCP4mg is a project that aims to provide a general-purpose tool for structural biologists, providing tools for X-ray structure solution, structure comparison and analysis, and publication-quality graphics. The map-fitting tools are available as a stand-alone package, distributed as `Coot'.

Features and development of <i>Coot</i>
Paul Emsley, Bernhard Lohkamp, W. G. Scott et al.|Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography|2010
Cited by 29.4kOpen Access

Coot is a molecular-graphics application for model building and validation of biological macromolecules. The program displays electron-density maps and atomic models and allows model manipulations such as idealization, real-space refinement, manual rotation/translation, rigid-body fitting, ligand search, solvation, mutations, rotamers and Ramachandran idealization. Furthermore, tools are provided for model validation as well as interfaces to external programs for refinement, validation and graphics. The software is designed to be easy to learn for novice users, which is achieved by ensuring that tools for common tasks are 'discoverable' through familiar user-interface elements (menus and toolbars) or by intuitive behaviour (mouse controls). Recent developments have focused on providing tools for expert users, with customisable key bindings, extensions and an extensive scripting interface. The software is under rapid development, but has already achieved very widespread use within the crystallographic community. The current state of the software is presented, with a description of the facilities available and of some of the underlying methods employed.

Overview of the<i>CCP</i>4 suite and current developments
Martyn Winn, Charles Ballard, Kevin Cowtan et al.|Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography|2011
Cited by 12.5kOpen Access

The CCP4 (Collaborative Computational Project, Number 4) software suite is a collection of programs and associated data and software libraries which can be used for macromolecular structure determination by X-ray crystallography. The suite is designed to be flexible, allowing users a number of methods of achieving their aims. The programs are from a wide variety of sources but are connected by a common infrastructure provided by standard file formats, data objects and graphical interfaces. Structure solution by macromolecular crystallography is becoming increasingly automated and the CCP4 suite includes several automation pipelines. After giving a brief description of the evolution of CCP4 over the last 30 years, an overview of the current suite is given. While detailed descriptions are given in the accompanying articles, here it is shown how the individual programs contribute to a complete software package.

Current developments in <i>Coot</i> for macromolecular model building of Electron Cryo‐microscopy and Crystallographic Data
Cited by 859Open Access

Coot is a tool widely used for model building, refinement, and validation of macromolecular structures. It has been extensively used for crystallography and, more recently, improvements have been introduced to aid in cryo-EM model building and refinement, as cryo-EM structures with resolution ranging 2.5-4 A are now routinely available. Model building into these maps can be time-consuming and requires experience in both biochemistry and building into low-resolution maps. To simplify and expedite the model building task, and minimize the needed expertise, new tools are being added in Coot. Some examples include morphing, Geman-McClure restraints, full-chain refinement, and Fourier-model based residue-type-specific Ramachandran restraints. Here, we present the current state-of-the-art in Coot usage.