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Ivan V. Korendovych

Ivan V. Korendovych

Ivan V. Korendovych

Professor and Associate Chair

CONTACT

Chemistry
2-016D Center for Science and Technology
Email: ikorendo@syr.edu
Office: 315.443.1661

PROGRAM AFFILIATIONS

Biochemistry

Degrees

  • B.S., 1999, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kiev, Ukraine
  • M.S., 2000, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kiev, Ukraine
  • Ph.D., 2006, Tufts University
  • Postdoctoral Researcher, 2006-2011, University of Pennsylvania

Social/Academic Links

Courses Taught

  • CHE 119: General Chemistry Lecture II (Honors and Majors)
  • CHE 411/611: Inorganic Chemistry
  • CHE 600: Bioinorganic Chemistry
  • CHE 626: Organometallic Chemistry
Research Specializations

Bioinorganic chemistry, biophysics, inorganic chemistry, chemical biology

Research Interests

korendovych_fig1.jpg

Metalloproteins are involved in all processes in the cell ranging from respiratory energy generation and signal transduction to metabolism. Such functional diversity is fulfilled by a relatively limited number of metal-containing cofactors that perform different functions depending on their interaction with the protein scaffold. Changes in protein tertiary and secondary structure upon allosteric ligand binding or changes in redox state can translate into subtle modifications of cofactor environment, leading to drastic alteration of the function. I seek to understand in molecular detail the interplay between protein scaffolds and metal cofactors that ultimately determine changes in protein function. Such understanding will have important medicinal, environmental and energy-related implications.



Hemoglobin's Role in the Innate Immune Response. Development of Protease Resistant Inhibitors of Hemoglobin-Toxin Interaction.

korendovych_fig2.jpg

Preserved for 500 million years of evolution, innate immune response is organism's first line of defense against various pathogens. Innate immunity relies on recognition of molecular patterns specific to all bacteria. While toll-like receptors are largely responsible for pathogen sensing, there is mounting evidence of involvement of oxygen transporting proteins in the initial steps of innate immune response. The goal of this project is to develop tools to regulate production of immunological reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by hemoglobin. Bacterial endotoxins trigger hemoglobin-assisted production of ROS that destroy the pathogen directly and induce inflammation that turns on additional mechanisms of cell defense. The ROS production is caused by oxidation of the heme iron resulting from protein conformational change, illustrating the delicate interplay between cofactor binding, protein stability and function. I seek to understand the interaction of lipid toxins derived from both gram-positive (lipoteichoic acid, LTA) and gram-negative (lipopolysaccharides, LPS) organisms with hemoglobin and its role in ROS production and regulation. In addition to basic fundamental value, this research will help develop new strategies for treatment of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus(MRSA) and cancer therapy (tumor necrosis factor activation by ROS).



Development of Biocompatible and Biodegradable Oxygen Activation Catalysts.

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Development of efficient catalysts for chemical transformations is the "Holy Grail" of chemistry. Nature has developed means to facilitate an enormous variety of chemical transformations with exceptional regio- and stereo-selectivity starting with simple starting reactants in the ultimately "green" solvent - water. My research program will focus on oxygen activation for hydrocarbon functionalization. Amazingly, nature achieved this goal using a handful of transition metals finely tuned to perform specific tasks by a protein scaffold. Mononuclear iron oxygenases, the most common class of such enzymes, frequently rely on one particular metal coordination fragment, the "2-His-1-carboxylate facial triad". This is a remarkable fact considering the diversity of function exhibited by these proteins. What are the factors that determine the type of reaction catalyzed by mononuclear iron oxygenases? How does the protein scaffold influence the function? What is responsible for functional switching? What is the role of the second coordination sphere? Solving these problems will provide us with new insights into protein function, better control of chemical transformations, and catalysts for new applications. I am interested in functional properties of the active site in isopenicillin N synthase (a representative iron oxygenase) and in designing simpler protein models to independently test and refine principles of binding of metals to protein scaffolds. All approaches work toward a detailed understanding of function of monoiron oxygenases at the molecular level. Combining the detailed knowledge of the structure and reaction mechanisms available for small molecule catalysts with computational tools for protein design will allow for development of efficient biocompatible and biodegradable catalysts of hydrocarbon hydroxylation and epoxidation.



Design of Switchable Enzymes for Metal Sensing.

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Metal sensing is important for a variety of applications ranging from metal tracking in living cells to detection of toxic metal ions in the environment. Protein-based sensors offer a number of advantages: they are biodegradable, biocompatible (and thus can be used in living cells), and most importantly, adaptable for a variety of different readout modes and metal ions. Additional benefits can be obtained by coupling metal ion binding to catalysis creating catalytically amplified sensors with exceptional sensitivity. I'm working on developing an enzymaticplatform for selective, catalytically amplified metal ion sensing. This will be accomplished by introducing a catalytic site into a switchable protein scaffold. Separation of the binding and the catalytic domains will allow for their independent development to improve both selectivity and sensitivity to the metal ion.

Honors and Awards

ACS Division of Inorganic Chemistry Young Investigator Award, 2007

Selected Publications

  • Kemp Eliminases of the AlleyCat Family Possess High Substrate Promiscuity, (ChemCatChem 5/2019), Dr. Elizabeth A. Caselle, Jennifer H. Yoon, Sagar Bhattacharya, Joel J. L. Rempillo , Zsófia Lengyel, Dr. Areetha D'Souza, Dr. Yurii S. Moroz, Patricia L. Tolbert, Dr. Alexander N. Volkov, Prof. Dr. Marcello Forconi, Prof. Dr. Carlos A. Castañeda, Prof. Dr. Olga V. Makhlynets, Prof. Dr. Ivan V. Korendovych, https://doi.org/10.1002/cctc.201900266
  • Remorino, A.; Korendovych, I. V.; Wu, Y.; DeGrado, W. F.; Hochstrasser, R. M. Residue specific vibrational echoes yield three dimensional structures of a transmembrane protein. Science 2011, 332,1206.
  • Highlighted as Editor's Choice in Sci. Signal. 2011, 4, ec161
  • Korendovych, I. V.; Kulp, D. W.; Wu, Y.; Cheng, H.; Roder, H.; DeGrado, W. F. Design of a Switchable Eliminase. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2011, 108, 6823.
  • Korendovych, I. V.; Senes, A.; Kim, Y. H.; Lear, J. D.; Fry, H. C.; Therien, M. J.; Blasie, J. K.; Walker, F. A.; DeGrado, W. F. De novo Design and Molecular Assembly of a Transmembrane Diporphyrin-binding Protein Complex. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 15516.
  • Korendovych, I. V.; Cho, M.; Makhlynets, O. V.; Butler, P.; Staples, R. J.; Rybak-Akimova, E. V. Anion and Carboxylic Acid Binding to Monotopic and Ditopic Amidopyridine Macrocycles. J. Org. Chem. 2008,73, 4771. Selected as a cover article of the issue.
  • Korendovych, I. V.; Kryatov, S. V.; Rybak-Akimova, E. V. Dioxygen Activation at Non-Heme Iron: Insights from Rapid Kinetic Studies. Acc. Chem. Res. 2007, 40, 510.
  • Korendovych, I. V.; Kryatova, O. P.; Reiff, W. M.; Rybak-Akimova, E. V. Iron(II) Complexes with Amide-Containing Macrocycles as Non-Heme Porphyrin Analogues. Inorg. Chem. 2007, 46, 4197.
  • Korendovych, I. V.; Kryatov, S. V.; Reiff, W. M.; Rybak-Akimova, E. V. Diiron(II) µ-aqua µ -hydroxo Model for Non-Heme Iron Sites in Proteins. Inorg. Chem. 2005, 44, 8656.
News
Advancing Artificial Enzyme Engineering

(Oct. 28, 2022)

A research team including chemists from Syracuse University create the fastest artificial enzyme ever reported thanks to a novel method of locating an enzyme’s “sweet spot.”

Chemists Develop Tools to Reduce Pesticide Impact

(Aug. 27, 2018)

Professor Ivan Korendovych awarded $107,000 grant to study how peptides mitigate effects of paraoxon

Chemist Named DAAD Research Ambassador

(Jan. 4, 2018)

Ivan Korendovych has been named a DAAD Research Ambassador for 2017-18.

Chemistry Professor Receives Five-Year NIH Award

(Sept. 16, 2016)

Nearly $2 million grant will support investigation of catalytic activity in the body