Claudio Tomi-Andrino
Assessing the impact of physicochemical parameters in the predictive capabilities of thermodynamics-based stoichiometric approaches under mesophilic and thermophilic conditions
Tomi-Andrino, Claudio; Norman, Rupert; Millat, Thomas; Soucaille, Philippe; Winzer, Klaus; Barrett, David A; King, John; Kim, Dong-Hyun
Authors
Rupert Norman
Thomas Millat
Dr PHILIPPE SOUCAILLE Philippe.Soucaille@nottingham.ac.uk
Chair in Synthetic Biology and Metabolic Engineering
KLAUS WINZER klaus.winzer@nottingham.ac.uk
Associate Professor
David A Barrett
JOHN KING JOHN.KING@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Theoretical Mechanics
DONG-HYUN KIM Dong-hyun.Kim@nottingham.ac.uk
Associate Professor
Abstract
Metabolic engineering in the post-genomic era is characterised by the development of new methods for metabolomics and fluxomics, supported by the integration of genetic engineering tools and mathematical modelling. Particularly, constraint-based stoichiometric models have been widely studied: (i) flux balance analysis (FBA) (in silico), and (ii) metabolic flux analysis (MFA) (in vivo). Recent studies have enabled the incorporation of thermodynamics and metabolomics data to improve the predictive capabilities of these approaches. However, an in-depth comparison and evaluation of these methods is lacking. This study presents a thorough analysis of two different in silico methods tested against experimental data (metabolomics and 13C-MFA) for the mesophile Escherichia coli. In particular, a modified version of the recently published matTFA toolbox was created, providing a broader range of physicochemical parameters. Validating against experimental data allowed the determination of the best physicochemical parameters to perform the TFA (Thermodynamics-based Flux Analysis). An analysis of flux pattern changes in the central carbon metabolism between 13C-MFA and TFA highlighted the limited capabilities of both approaches for elucidating the anaplerotic fluxes. In addition, a method based on centrality measures was suggested to identify important metabolites that (if quantified) would allow to further constrain the TFA. Finally, this study emphasised the need for standardisation in the fluxomics community: novel approaches are frequently released but a thorough comparison with currently accepted methods is not always performed.
Citation
Tomi-Andrino, C., Norman, R., Millat, T., Soucaille, P., Winzer, K., Barrett, D. A., …Kim, D. Assessing the impact of physicochemical parameters in the predictive capabilities of thermodynamics-based stoichiometric approaches under mesophilic and thermophilic conditions
Working Paper Type | Working Paper |
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Deposit Date | Apr 16, 2023 |
Public URL | https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3918753 |
Publisher URL | https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.02.03.932855v2 |
Additional Information | Preprint. |
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