Poster
Transcription
Poster
Isovaleryl CoA Dehydrogenase: Dehydrogenate This! Cedarburg SMART Team: Nicholas Grabon, Elizabeth Bougie, Mathew Cira, Colin Erovick, Anne Fahey, Kelsey Jeletz, Eleanore Kukla, Matthew Murphy, Tim Rohman, Alyssa Sass, Michelle Sella, Laura Tiffany, Samuel Wolff Teacher: Karen Tiffany Cedarburg High School, W68N611 Evergreen Blvd, Cedarburg WI, 53012 Mentor: Jung-Ja P. Kim, Ph.D. Abstract Although rare, isovaleric acidemia (IVA) is a potentially fatal metabolic disorder that affects one in every 250,000 people in the US. IVA results from lack of an enzyme, isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (IVD), involved in the breakdown of leucine. Without this enzyme, leucine catabolism stops and organic acids accumulate within the body, causing symptoms of IVA, including vomiting, diarrhea, and fatigue. IVD belongs to a family of related enzymes called acylCoA dehydrogenases. IVD catalyzes the dehydrogenation, or removal of a pair of hydrogen atoms, of a small, branched-chain substrate, isovaleryl-CoA, during the third step of leucine catabolism. Glutamate 254 of IVD removes one hydrogen as a proton from the substrate, and flavin adenine dinucleotide, FAD, a cofactor of the enzyme, takes away the other hydrogen from the substrate. The three-dimensional structure of IVD, as determined through X-ray diffraction, illustrates how a small-branched chain substrate is able to fit into the active site of this enzyme and enables further investigation of how mutation of the IVD gene could affect IVD function, thus resulting in IVA. To further understand the structural impact on substrate specificity, a physical model of IVD has been designed and built by the Cedarburg High School SMART (Students Modeling a Research Topic) Team using 3D printing technology. Supported by a grant from NIH-NCRR-SEPA. Medical College of Wisconsin, 8701 Watertown Plank Rd, Milwaukee WI, 53226 Role of the Enzyme Cells need anabolic processes to make necessary chemical components as well as catabolic pathways to break them down. For example, proteins made by linking any of twenty different amino acids together are broken down by breaking peptide bonds connecting the amino acids. Leucine, an amino acid, is further broken down in a series of reactions, one of which is catalyzed by isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (IVD). If IVD is lacking or doesn’t work effectively, the breakdown of leucine cannot proceed and organic acids build up in the body, resulting in the disease isovaleric acidemia (IVA). Leucine Catabolic Pathway Substrate Specificity •Only a short, branched chain fits into the active site of IVD. Leucine •The substrate for IVD, isovaleryl-CoA, is short and branched. α-ketoisocaproate isovaleryl-CoA Isovaleryl-CoA IVD 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA •Other acyl-CoA dehydrogenase substrates, such as Palmitoyl-CoA are nonbranched and/or longer than isovaleryl-CoA, and thus cannot fit into the active site of IVD. 3-methylglutaconyl-CoA 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA acetyl-CoA Palmitoyl-CoA acetoacetate Helix G Substrate FAD Cell mitochondrion Catalytic Mechanism FAD FAD Helix E Glu254 substrate IVD monomer Glutamate 254 Glutamate 254 substrate 1IVH.pdb Isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase Results of IVD Deficiency • Isovaleryl-CoA and organic acids accumulate in the bloodstream, resulting in the disease isovaleric acidemia (IVA). • Symptoms of IVA include a “sweaty foot” odor, poor eating, vomiting, and coma. Death can occur. • If diagnosed at birth and protein levels are monitored, symptoms can be prevented. The IVD monomers are colored separately. FAD is shaded yellow and CoA persulfide (a substrate analog) is colored cyan. In the green monomer, the side chain of the catalytic glutamate is shown in red. Active Site •Different conformations in Helices E and G make the bonding pocket in IVD shallower than in other acyl-CoA dehydrongeases. •A glycine at position 374 does not have steric repulsion with the methyl group of isovalerylCoA, allowing for a branched pocket in the IVD active site. •In straight chain dehydrogenases, a tyrosine is present at this location which repels the methyl group of the IVD substrate. A SMART Team project supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) – National Center for Research Resources Science Education Partnership Award (NCRR-SEPA)