Optimizing ITPA R178C Assays via HPLC

Faculty Mentor

Nicholas Burgis

Presentation Type

Poster

Start Date

4-14-2026 11:30 AM

End Date

4-14-2026 1:30 PM

Location

PUB NCR

Primary Discipline of Presentation

Chemistry and Biochemistry

Abstract

Two of the major nucleotide bases in DNA and RNA (Adenine and Guanine) are derived from the purine Inosine Monophosphate (IMP). IMP may occasionally form the noncanonical nucleotide Inosine Triphosphate (ITP) within the cell and become incorporated into DNA during replication, leading to potentially lethal errors. To combat this, human cells produce the “housekeeping” enzyme Inosine Triphosphatase (ITPA) to revert ITP to IMP. A mutation of this protein that replaces the 178th amino acid Arginine with Cysteine (R178C) is associated with a fatal infantile encephalopathy. Previous assessments of enzyme-substrate binding and catalysis for ITPA variants have been run at a neutral pH of 7.4, but a preliminary survey performed last year has implied that a pH of 6.4 may increase the enzyme catalysis of the R178C variant when tested via High-Pressure Liquid Chromatography (HPLC). We will compare enzyme performance at these pHs via Michaelis Menten kinetics. Similar assays will also be used to compare the enzymatic activity of our proteins when frozen at -80C or when flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen to our established method of storage in glycerol. Changes in activity resulting from alterations to assay pH or protein storage conditions will be useful for the development of a high throughput assay to identify potential stabilizing agents.

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Apr 14th, 11:30 AM Apr 14th, 1:30 PM

Optimizing ITPA R178C Assays via HPLC

PUB NCR

Two of the major nucleotide bases in DNA and RNA (Adenine and Guanine) are derived from the purine Inosine Monophosphate (IMP). IMP may occasionally form the noncanonical nucleotide Inosine Triphosphate (ITP) within the cell and become incorporated into DNA during replication, leading to potentially lethal errors. To combat this, human cells produce the “housekeeping” enzyme Inosine Triphosphatase (ITPA) to revert ITP to IMP. A mutation of this protein that replaces the 178th amino acid Arginine with Cysteine (R178C) is associated with a fatal infantile encephalopathy. Previous assessments of enzyme-substrate binding and catalysis for ITPA variants have been run at a neutral pH of 7.4, but a preliminary survey performed last year has implied that a pH of 6.4 may increase the enzyme catalysis of the R178C variant when tested via High-Pressure Liquid Chromatography (HPLC). We will compare enzyme performance at these pHs via Michaelis Menten kinetics. Similar assays will also be used to compare the enzymatic activity of our proteins when frozen at -80C or when flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen to our established method of storage in glycerol. Changes in activity resulting from alterations to assay pH or protein storage conditions will be useful for the development of a high throughput assay to identify potential stabilizing agents.