Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes

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Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes. / West, Robert; Delattre, Hadrien; Noor, Elad; Feliu, Elisenda; Soyer, Orkun.

In: eLife, Vol. 12, e84379, 2023, p. 1-55.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

West, R, Delattre, H, Noor, E, Feliu, E & Soyer, O 2023, 'Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes', eLife, vol. 12, e84379, pp. 1-55. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.84379

APA

West, R., Delattre, H., Noor, E., Feliu, E., & Soyer, O. (2023). Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes. eLife, 12, 1-55. [e84379]. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.84379

Vancouver

West R, Delattre H, Noor E, Feliu E, Soyer O. Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes. eLife. 2023;12:1-55. e84379. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.84379

Author

West, Robert ; Delattre, Hadrien ; Noor, Elad ; Feliu, Elisenda ; Soyer, Orkun. / Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes. In: eLife. 2023 ; Vol. 12. pp. 1-55.

Bibtex

@article{81f8711f3dfc4620a5381c1338a8c9bf,
title = "Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes",
abstract = "Cycling of co-substrates, whereby a metabolite is converted among alternate forms via different reactions, is ubiquitous in metabolism. Several cycled co-substrates are well known as energy and electron carriers (e.g. ATP and NAD(P)H), but there are also other metabolites that act as cycled co-substrates in different parts of central metabolism. Here, we develop a mathematical framework to analyse the effect of co-substrate cycling on metabolic flux. In the cases of a single reaction and linear pathways, we find that co-substrate cycling imposes an additional flux limit on a reaction, distinct to the limit imposed by the kinetics of the primary enzyme catalysing that reaction. Using analytical methods, we show that this additional limit is a function of the total pool size and turnover rate of the cycled co-substrate. Expanding from this insight and using simulations, we show that regulation of these two parameters can allow regulation of flux dynamics in branched and coupled pathways. To support these theoretical insights, we analysed existing flux measurements and enzyme levels from the central carbon metabolism and identified several reactions that could be limited by the dynamics of co-substrate cycling. We discuss how the limitations imposed by co-substrate cycling provide experimentally testable hypotheses on specific metabolic phenotypes. We conclude that measuring and controlling co-substrate dynamics is crucial for understanding and engineering metabolic fluxes in cells.",
author = "Robert West and Hadrien Delattre and Elad Noor and Elisenda Feliu and Orkun Soyer",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.7554/eLife.84379",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "1--55",
journal = "eLife",
issn = "2050-084X",
publisher = "eLife Sciences Publications Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dynamics of co-substrate pools can constrain and regulate metabolic fluxes

AU - West, Robert

AU - Delattre, Hadrien

AU - Noor, Elad

AU - Feliu, Elisenda

AU - Soyer, Orkun

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Cycling of co-substrates, whereby a metabolite is converted among alternate forms via different reactions, is ubiquitous in metabolism. Several cycled co-substrates are well known as energy and electron carriers (e.g. ATP and NAD(P)H), but there are also other metabolites that act as cycled co-substrates in different parts of central metabolism. Here, we develop a mathematical framework to analyse the effect of co-substrate cycling on metabolic flux. In the cases of a single reaction and linear pathways, we find that co-substrate cycling imposes an additional flux limit on a reaction, distinct to the limit imposed by the kinetics of the primary enzyme catalysing that reaction. Using analytical methods, we show that this additional limit is a function of the total pool size and turnover rate of the cycled co-substrate. Expanding from this insight and using simulations, we show that regulation of these two parameters can allow regulation of flux dynamics in branched and coupled pathways. To support these theoretical insights, we analysed existing flux measurements and enzyme levels from the central carbon metabolism and identified several reactions that could be limited by the dynamics of co-substrate cycling. We discuss how the limitations imposed by co-substrate cycling provide experimentally testable hypotheses on specific metabolic phenotypes. We conclude that measuring and controlling co-substrate dynamics is crucial for understanding and engineering metabolic fluxes in cells.

AB - Cycling of co-substrates, whereby a metabolite is converted among alternate forms via different reactions, is ubiquitous in metabolism. Several cycled co-substrates are well known as energy and electron carriers (e.g. ATP and NAD(P)H), but there are also other metabolites that act as cycled co-substrates in different parts of central metabolism. Here, we develop a mathematical framework to analyse the effect of co-substrate cycling on metabolic flux. In the cases of a single reaction and linear pathways, we find that co-substrate cycling imposes an additional flux limit on a reaction, distinct to the limit imposed by the kinetics of the primary enzyme catalysing that reaction. Using analytical methods, we show that this additional limit is a function of the total pool size and turnover rate of the cycled co-substrate. Expanding from this insight and using simulations, we show that regulation of these two parameters can allow regulation of flux dynamics in branched and coupled pathways. To support these theoretical insights, we analysed existing flux measurements and enzyme levels from the central carbon metabolism and identified several reactions that could be limited by the dynamics of co-substrate cycling. We discuss how the limitations imposed by co-substrate cycling provide experimentally testable hypotheses on specific metabolic phenotypes. We conclude that measuring and controlling co-substrate dynamics is crucial for understanding and engineering metabolic fluxes in cells.

U2 - 10.7554/eLife.84379

DO - 10.7554/eLife.84379

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36799616

VL - 12

SP - 1

EP - 55

JO - eLife

JF - eLife

SN - 2050-084X

M1 - e84379

ER -

ID: 337942034