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Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism

In metabolism research, thermodynamics is usually used to determine the directionality of a reaction or the feasibility of a pathway. However, the relationship between thermodynamic potentials and fluxes is not limited to questions of directionality: thermodynamics also affects the kinetics of react...

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Autores principales: Noor, Elad, Bar-Even, Arren, Flamholz, Avi, Reznik, Ed, Liebermeister, Wolfram, Milo, Ron
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3930492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586134
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003483
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author Noor, Elad
Bar-Even, Arren
Flamholz, Avi
Reznik, Ed
Liebermeister, Wolfram
Milo, Ron
author_facet Noor, Elad
Bar-Even, Arren
Flamholz, Avi
Reznik, Ed
Liebermeister, Wolfram
Milo, Ron
author_sort Noor, Elad
collection PubMed
description In metabolism research, thermodynamics is usually used to determine the directionality of a reaction or the feasibility of a pathway. However, the relationship between thermodynamic potentials and fluxes is not limited to questions of directionality: thermodynamics also affects the kinetics of reactions through the flux-force relationship, which states that the logarithm of the ratio between the forward and reverse fluxes is directly proportional to the change in Gibbs energy due to a reaction (Δ(r)G′). Accordingly, if an enzyme catalyzes a reaction with a Δ(r)G′ of -5.7 kJ/mol then the forward flux will be roughly ten times the reverse flux. As Δ(r)G′ approaches equilibrium (Δ(r)G′ = 0 kJ/mol), exponentially more enzyme counterproductively catalyzes the reverse reaction, reducing the net rate at which the reaction proceeds. Thus, the enzyme level required to achieve a given flux increases dramatically near equilibrium. Here, we develop a framework for quantifying the degree to which pathways suffer these thermodynamic limitations on flux. For each pathway, we calculate a single thermodynamically-derived metric (the Max-min Driving Force, MDF), which enables objective ranking of pathways by the degree to which their flux is constrained by low thermodynamic driving force. Our framework accounts for the effect of pH, ionic strength and metabolite concentration ranges and allows us to quantify how alterations to the pathway structure affect the pathway's thermodynamics. Applying this methodology to pathways of central metabolism sheds light on some of their features, including metabolic bypasses (e.g., fermentation pathways bypassing substrate-level phosphorylation), substrate channeling (e.g., of oxaloacetate from malate dehydrogenase to citrate synthase), and use of alternative cofactors (e.g., quinone as an electron acceptor instead of NAD). The methods presented here place another arrow in metabolic engineers' quiver, providing a simple means of evaluating the thermodynamic and kinetic quality of different pathway chemistries that produce the same molecules.
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spelling pubmed-39304922014-02-25 Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism Noor, Elad Bar-Even, Arren Flamholz, Avi Reznik, Ed Liebermeister, Wolfram Milo, Ron PLoS Comput Biol Research Article In metabolism research, thermodynamics is usually used to determine the directionality of a reaction or the feasibility of a pathway. However, the relationship between thermodynamic potentials and fluxes is not limited to questions of directionality: thermodynamics also affects the kinetics of reactions through the flux-force relationship, which states that the logarithm of the ratio between the forward and reverse fluxes is directly proportional to the change in Gibbs energy due to a reaction (Δ(r)G′). Accordingly, if an enzyme catalyzes a reaction with a Δ(r)G′ of -5.7 kJ/mol then the forward flux will be roughly ten times the reverse flux. As Δ(r)G′ approaches equilibrium (Δ(r)G′ = 0 kJ/mol), exponentially more enzyme counterproductively catalyzes the reverse reaction, reducing the net rate at which the reaction proceeds. Thus, the enzyme level required to achieve a given flux increases dramatically near equilibrium. Here, we develop a framework for quantifying the degree to which pathways suffer these thermodynamic limitations on flux. For each pathway, we calculate a single thermodynamically-derived metric (the Max-min Driving Force, MDF), which enables objective ranking of pathways by the degree to which their flux is constrained by low thermodynamic driving force. Our framework accounts for the effect of pH, ionic strength and metabolite concentration ranges and allows us to quantify how alterations to the pathway structure affect the pathway's thermodynamics. Applying this methodology to pathways of central metabolism sheds light on some of their features, including metabolic bypasses (e.g., fermentation pathways bypassing substrate-level phosphorylation), substrate channeling (e.g., of oxaloacetate from malate dehydrogenase to citrate synthase), and use of alternative cofactors (e.g., quinone as an electron acceptor instead of NAD). The methods presented here place another arrow in metabolic engineers' quiver, providing a simple means of evaluating the thermodynamic and kinetic quality of different pathway chemistries that produce the same molecules. Public Library of Science 2014-02-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3930492/ /pubmed/24586134 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003483 Text en © 2014 Noor et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Noor, Elad
Bar-Even, Arren
Flamholz, Avi
Reznik, Ed
Liebermeister, Wolfram
Milo, Ron
Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism
title Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism
title_full Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism
title_fullStr Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism
title_full_unstemmed Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism
title_short Pathway Thermodynamics Highlights Kinetic Obstacles in Central Metabolism
title_sort pathway thermodynamics highlights kinetic obstacles in central metabolism
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3930492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586134
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003483
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