Team:TU Delft/Modeling/MFA/explanation
From 2010.igem.org
(New page: = Metabolic Flux Analysis, how does it work = Metabolic Flux Analysis With a metabolic flux analysis a metabolic network can be studied. It can show problems with viability of the cell a...)
Newer edit →
Revision as of 12:02, 10 September 2010
Metabolic Flux Analysis, how does it work
Metabolic Flux Analysis
With a metabolic flux analysis a metabolic network can be studied. It can show problems with viability of the cell and can calculate theoretical maximal yields. For the metabolic flux analysis CellNetAnalyzer, a tool for Matlab, was used. CellNetAnalyzer already has a simplified, yet still extensive metabolic network of E. coli. To this network the hydrocarbon degradation pathway was added to see whether our construct would not result in a cell that cannot grow due to redox stress. After this, other pathways were added to the network see how efficient certain products could be produced and another electron acceptor was investigated.
Metabolic networks A metabolic network is the collection of all the reactions that occur inside a cell. All these reactions are coupled and form a network together. This network has a couple of transport reactions with substrate (food) as an input and products (stool) as output. Other products of the metabolic network are energy, which is stored in molecules such as ATP and NADH, and building blocks for the cell (biomass). The substances between the substrates and the products are called intermediates. An example of this is in figure 1.
- insert picture here
Figure 1: Small metabolic network
The change in the concentration of the substrate and products outside the cell can easily be calculated or measured. This results in uptake and excretion speeds. The intracellelular rates (inside the cell) can not be figured out as easily, but if enough information is known from the uptake en excretion rates, the intracellular rates can often be calculated.
Pseudo-steady-state assumption In order to do this, it is assumed that all the substances inside the cell are in pseudo-steady-state. This means that the amount of the substance is constant, meaning that the total production and the total consumption of a substance are equal to each other. For figure 1 this would mean that, if it is known that 1 mmol gx^-1 h^-1 of substrate is going in and 0.2 mmol gx^-1 h^-1 of product 1 is coming out, then the other rates can be calculated. The calculation results in 0.44 mmol gx^-1 h^-1 of product 2 coming out and 0.36 mmol gx-1 h-1 goes through intermediate 2 to the biomass. This is essentially the metabolic flux analysis. Units in MFA The rates are usually defined in moles per amount of biomass per time. In CellNetAnalyzer these units are mmol per gram of dry weight biomass per hour. The reaction that genereates biomass, called μ, is an exception and has the unit h-1.These speeds indicate how fast a reaction goes. A metabolic flux analysis does not calculate maximal reaction speeds however! It can only investigates relations between reactions. Here comes the next subject into play, optimization. Mathematical optimization A production of a metabolic network can be optimized with a built in function of CellNetAnalyzer. This function will calculate with a given set of substrate inflows the maximal rate for a product. An advantage of this is that not all the transport rates need to be known, the function simply finds an optimal solution.
For example, in figure 1 there is a inflow of 1 mmol gx-1 h-1 substrate and the rate for product 2 needs to be maximized. The function will then assign values to all the reaction rates to make the outflow of product 2 as large as possible, while still fulfilling the pseudo-steady-state condition. For this example the outflow of product 2 will be 0.6 mmol gx^-1 h^-1. The rest goes into biomass. The maximal yield is then 0.6 mol product 2 per mol substrate.
It is also possible to optimize to growth by maximizing μ. If there is no feasible solution for this, then the cell is not viable because it can not use the substrate for growth. This may occur for example when a lot of NADH is produced, but cannot be consumed sufficiently somewhere else in the network. Because of this the network can not maintain the pseudo-steady-state condition. This situation is called redox stress.
Go back now you are enlightened about how a MFA works