Medical Student Research Fellowship for Summer 2009
Mentor: Richard J. Auchus
Department: Internal Medicine/Endocrinology & Metabolism
Room number: Y9.308
Mail Code: 8857
Phone number: 8-6751
E-mail: richard.auchus@UTSouthwestern.edu
Project title: biochemistry, physiology, and genetics of human steroid biosynthesis
Human subjects IRB approved project number (where applicable): 0902-505, 1203-776,
1203-811, 052007-067
Animal subjects IRB approved project number (where applicable): N/A
Project Type: basic research and patient-based research
Brief Description of Project:
We are conducting a genome-wide analysis to determine the cause of an autosomal
dominant case of ACTH-Independent Macronodular Adrenal Hyperplasia (AIMAH).
Although AIMAH has been correlated with variations in the expression of many
proteins, its root cause is currently unknown.
Previous Research Activities or Publications with Medical Students:
Tim C. Lee worked with me for a year after graduating college and during the
summer after his first year in medical school (1996-1998). He and I developed
our yeast system for studying enzymology of steroidogenic cytochromes P450 (Auchus
et al 1998 J Biol Chem 273:3158-3165; Lee et al 1999 J Clin Endocrinol Metab
84:2104-2110). Tim received the Academic Pediatric Society/Society for Pediatric
Research (APS/SPR) Student Research Award in 1999 for this work. Tim was chief
resident in pediatrics at UCLA and is now in private practice.
Kavita Vyas, worked in my lab the summer of 2000, characterizing the biochemistry
of fusion proteins to probe the mechanism of action of cytochrome b5 on CYP17.
Kavita won the award for best poster at the 39th Medical Student Research Forum,
which was presented at the Endocrine Society meeting in June 2001, and she is
now an MS4 at Columbia and applying for residency in Internal Medicine.
Daniel Sherbet worked in my lab for 2 summers (2001-2002, characterizing a mutation
in CYP17 that causes isolated 17, 20-lyase deficiency by a novel mechanism.
Daniel's oral presentation at the 40th Medical Student Research Forum was selected
as the best talk of the day. The work was presented at the Endocrine Society
meeting in June, 2002 and published (Sherbet et al J Biol Chem 278:48563-48569).
Daniel spent 2004-05 as a medical student research Fellow of the Howard Hughes
Medical Institute studying hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (HSDs). He and I have
written a book chapter, a review article (Mol Cell Endocrinol 265-266:83-88),
and a manuscript now under review about his HSD work. He is a first-year Cardiology
fellow at UTSW.
Kristen Bruce, studied (-)-progesterone (the enantiomer of progesterone) as
an inhibitor of CYP17 and CYP21 in 2001 and started our work on HSD directionality.
Her work on (-)-progesterone was published (Auchus et al Arch Biochem Biophys
409:134-144). She is now in dental school.
David Stidd worked here in 2003. He synthesized deuterium-labeled steroids to
measure kinetic isotope effects for CYP17 and CYP21, and he won an award for
best basic science poster at the 42nd Medical Student Research Forum for this
work. He came back to the lab for 6 months in 2006 to finish off his work, and
we are in the process of writing a manuscript.
Andrew Brandmeier was a SURF student in 2003. He engineered mutations to change
the directional preference of AKR1C9 (rat liver 3?-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase),
which was published in 2006 (Papari-Zareei et al Endocrinology 147:1591-1597).
He is now an MD-PhD student at Indiana University.
Siareyah Rambally identified a mutation in a patient with 17?-hydroxysteroid
type 3 deficiency in 2003. She also demonstrated that the magnitude of the directional
preference for human 17?-hydroxysteroid type 1 in transfected cells was not
fixed but could be varied by changes in culture medium that alter intracellular
nicotinamide cofactor concentrations. She is co-author with Dan Sherbet on the
review article in press and the manuscript in review. She is currently an internal
medicine resident in Houston.
Neema Chokshi and Sarita Singeetham helped to organize our adrenal vein sampling
serum bank, leading to an Endocrine Society abstract and now a manuscript (resubmitted
with revisions to J Clin Endocrinol Metab) about new approaches to the diagnosis
and understanding the physiology of primary aldosteronism. On the side, they
sequenced the CYP17 gene from a patient with 17-hydroxylase deficiency and won
an award for top clinical science poster at the 2006 MSRF. They are currently
interns in medicine and pediatrics.
Nina Akbar was a QP-SURF student in 2006, and she performed enzyme kinetics
for the 17?-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase work that is under review. She is an
MS1 at UTSW.
Roshan Morbia worked on CYP21A2 genotyping and adrenal vein sampling for macronodular
adrenocortical hyperplasia. The latter work was presented as a poster at the
Endocrine Society in 2008. Roshan is an MS3 at UTSW.
Zichun Feng worked on RODH, an enzyme with multiple HSD activities, making mutations
and studying steady-state steroid distributions. Her work was also presented
at the Endocrine Society in 2008, and she is an MS3 at UTSW. Her work also received
a "best poster" award at the MSRF in 2008.
Yishan (Coral) Zhou was a SURF student in 2007. She performed kinetic isotope
effect experiments on CYP17A1 and CYP21A2, work that is nearing completion.
She is applying for graduate schools now.
Diane Meyer was a QP-SURF student in the lab during the summer of 2008, and
she worked on the enzymology of RODH mutations in yeast microsomes. She is applying
for MD-PhD programs now.