Mathematical Modeling of Plant Metabolic Pathways
β Scribed by John A. Morgan; David Rhodes
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 223 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1096-7176
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β¦ Synopsis
The understanding of the control of metabolic flux in plants requires integrated mathematical formulations of gene and protein expression, enzyme kinetics, and developmental biology. Plants have a large number of metabolically active compartments, and nonsteady-state conditions are frequently encountered. Consequently steady-state metabolic flux balance and isotopic flux balance modeling approaches have limited utility in probing plant metabolic systems. Transient isotopic flux analysis and kinetic modeling are powerful proven techniques for the quantification of metabolic fluxes in compartmentalized, dynamic metabolic systems. These tools are now widely used to address metabolic flux responses to environmental and genetic perturbations in plant metabolism. Continued developments in isotopic and kinetic modeling, quantifying metabolite exchange between compartments, and transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulatory mechanisms governing enzyme level and activity will enable simulation of large sections of plant metabolism under non-steady-state conditions. Metabolic control analysis will continue to make substantial contributions to the understanding of quantitative distribution of control of flux. From the synergy between mathematical models and experiments, creative methods for controlling the distribution of flux by genetic or environmental means will be discovered and rationally implemented.
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## Abstract Studies of metabolism usually evoke memories of densely written wall charts of metabolic pathways of enormous complexity, such as the IUBMBβNicholson metabolic pathways map or the Roche metabolic pathways wall chart. Advances in bioinformatics in the past decade have brought about a rev