Thermodynamics-Based Metabolic Flux Analysis

A new form of metabolic flux analysis (MFA) called thermodynamics-based metabolic flux analysis (TMFA) is introduced with the capability of generating thermodynamically feasible flux and metabolite activity profiles on a genome scale. TMFA involves the use of a set of linear thermodynamic constraint...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biophysical journal Vol. 92; no. 5; pp. 1792 - 1805
Main Authors: Henry, Christopher S., Broadbelt, Linda J., Hatzimanikatis, Vassily
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Elsevier Inc 01-03-2007
Biophysical Society
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Summary:A new form of metabolic flux analysis (MFA) called thermodynamics-based metabolic flux analysis (TMFA) is introduced with the capability of generating thermodynamically feasible flux and metabolite activity profiles on a genome scale. TMFA involves the use of a set of linear thermodynamic constraints in addition to the mass balance constraints typically used in MFA. TMFA produces flux distributions that do not contain any thermodynamically infeasible reactions or pathways, and it provides information about the free energy change of reactions and the range of metabolite activities in addition to reaction fluxes. TMFA is applied to study the thermodynamically feasible ranges for the fluxes and the Gibbs free energy change, Δ r G′, of the reactions and the activities of the metabolites in the genome-scale metabolic model of Escherichia coli developed by Palsson and co-workers. In the TMFA of the genome scale model, the metabolite activities and reaction Δ r G′ are able to achieve a wide range of values at optimal growth. The reaction dihydroorotase is identified as a possible thermodynamic bottleneck in E. coli metabolism with a Δ r G′ constrained close to zero while numerous reactions are identified throughout metabolism for which Δ r G′ is always highly negative regardless of metabolite concentrations. As it has been proposed previously, these reactions with exclusively negative Δ r G′ might be candidates for cell regulation, and we find that a significant number of these reactions appear to be the first steps in the linear portion of numerous biosynthesis pathways. The thermodynamically feasible ranges for the concentration ratios ATP/ADP, NAD(P)/NAD(P)H, and H extracellular + / H intracellular + are also determined and found to encompass the values observed experimentally in every case. Further, we find that the NAD/NADH and NADP/NADPH ratios maintained in the cell are close to the minimum feasible ratio and maximum feasible ratio, respectively.
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Address reprint requests to V. Hatzimanikatis, E-mail: vassily.hatzimanikatis@epfl.ch.
ISSN:0006-3495
1542-0086
DOI:10.1529/biophysj.106.093138