The requirement for net balance of synthesis, degradation and transport for all intermediates in the pathways from glucose to fat imposes constraints on the balance of fluxes between different pathways. Linear programming has been used to examine the interactions between these constraints on metabolism in adipocytes and the requirement for efficiency in the conversion of glucose into fat. The circumstances under which excessive ATP synthesis would accompany this conversion have been investigated.
Elementary flux modes (direct reaction routes) are minimal sets of enzymes that can operate at steady state, with all irreversible reactions used in the appropriate direction. They can be interpreted as component pathways of a (bio)chemical reaction network. Here, two different definitions of elementary modes are given and their equivalence is proved. Several algebraic properties of elementary modes are then presented and proved. This concerns, amongst other features, the minimal number of enzymes of the network not used in an elementary mode and the situations where irreversible reactions are replaced by reversible ones. Based on these properties, a refined algorithm is presented, and it is formally proved that this algorithm will exclusively generate all the elementary flux modes of an arbitrary network containing reversible or irreversible reactions or both. The algorithm is illustrated by a biochemical example relevant in nucleotide metabolism. The computer implementation in two different programming languages is discussed.
Biochemists have long assumed that the flux through a metabolic pathway can be controlled by the activity of a key regulatory enzyme near the beginning of the pathway. We present the accumulating evidence that every step in this assumption is flawed. Instead, effective physiological control of metabolism is shown to involve simultaneous multisite modulation through action on a number of enzymes.
The dynamic and steady-state behaviour of a computer simulation of the Calvin cycle reactions of the chloroplast, including starch synthesis and degradation, and triose phosphate export have been investigated. A major difference compared with previous models is that none of the reversible reactions are assumed to be at equilibrium. The model can exhibit alternate steady states of low or high carbon assimilation flux, with hysteresis in the transitions between the steady states induced by environmental factors such as phosphate and light intensity. The enzymes which have the greatest influence on the flux have been investigated by calculation of their flux control coefficients. Different patterns of control are exhibited over the assimilation flux, the flux to starch and the flux to cytosolic triose phosphate. The assimilation flux is mostly sensitive to sedoheptulose bisphosphatase and Rubisco, with the exact distribution depending on their relative activities. Other enzymes, particularly the triose phosphate translocator, become more influential when other fluxes are considered. These results are shown to be broadly consistent with observations on transgenic plants.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.