Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate Equations

The study of biological systems at the genome scale helps us understand fundamental biological processes that govern the activity of living organisms and regulate their interactions with the environment. Genome-scale metabolic models are usually analysed using constraint-based methods, since detaile...

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Main Authors: Delali A. Adiamah, Jean-Marc Schwartz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-07-01
Series:Metabolites
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2218-1989/2/3/382
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spelling doaj-9bd1f78e5c134070bedb79644288cd7d2020-11-24T23:51:59ZengMDPI AGMetabolites2218-19892012-07-012338239710.3390/metabo2030382Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate EquationsDelali A. AdiamahJean-Marc SchwartzThe study of biological systems at the genome scale helps us understand fundamental biological processes that govern the activity of living organisms and regulate their interactions with the environment. Genome-scale metabolic models are usually analysed using constraint-based methods, since detailed rate equations and kinetic parameters are often missing. However, constraint-based analysis is limited in capturing the dynamics of cellular processes. In this paper, we present an approach to build a genome-scale kinetic model of Mycobacterium tuberculosis metabolism using generic rate equations. M. tuberculosis causes tuberculosis which remains one of the largest killer infectious diseases. Using a genetic algorithm, we estimated kinetic parameters for a genome-scale metabolic model of M. tuberculosis based on flux distributions derived from Flux Balance Analysis. Our results show that an excellent agreement with flux values is obtained under several growth conditions, although kinetic parameters may vary in different conditions. Parameter variability analysis indicates that a high degree of redundancy remains present in model parameters, which suggests that the integration of other types of high-throughput datasets will enable the development of better constrained models accounting for a variety of in vivo phenotypes.http://www.mdpi.com/2218-1989/2/3/382tuberculosismetabolism, kinetic modelsystems biology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Delali A. Adiamah
Jean-Marc Schwartz
spellingShingle Delali A. Adiamah
Jean-Marc Schwartz
Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate Equations
Metabolites
tuberculosis
metabolism, kinetic model
systems biology
author_facet Delali A. Adiamah
Jean-Marc Schwartz
author_sort Delali A. Adiamah
title Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate Equations
title_short Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate Equations
title_full Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate Equations
title_fullStr Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate Equations
title_full_unstemmed Construction of a Genome-Scale Kinetic Model of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Using Generic Rate Equations
title_sort construction of a genome-scale kinetic model of mycobacterium tuberculosis using generic rate equations
publisher MDPI AG
series Metabolites
issn 2218-1989
publishDate 2012-07-01
description The study of biological systems at the genome scale helps us understand fundamental biological processes that govern the activity of living organisms and regulate their interactions with the environment. Genome-scale metabolic models are usually analysed using constraint-based methods, since detailed rate equations and kinetic parameters are often missing. However, constraint-based analysis is limited in capturing the dynamics of cellular processes. In this paper, we present an approach to build a genome-scale kinetic model of Mycobacterium tuberculosis metabolism using generic rate equations. M. tuberculosis causes tuberculosis which remains one of the largest killer infectious diseases. Using a genetic algorithm, we estimated kinetic parameters for a genome-scale metabolic model of M. tuberculosis based on flux distributions derived from Flux Balance Analysis. Our results show that an excellent agreement with flux values is obtained under several growth conditions, although kinetic parameters may vary in different conditions. Parameter variability analysis indicates that a high degree of redundancy remains present in model parameters, which suggests that the integration of other types of high-throughput datasets will enable the development of better constrained models accounting for a variety of in vivo phenotypes.
topic tuberculosis
metabolism, kinetic model
systems biology
url http://www.mdpi.com/2218-1989/2/3/382
work_keys_str_mv AT delaliaadiamah constructionofagenomescalekineticmodelofmycobacteriumtuberculosisusinggenericrateequations
AT jeanmarcschwartz constructionofagenomescalekineticmodelofmycobacteriumtuberculosisusinggenericrateequations
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