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Metabolite-balancing techniques vs. 13C tracer experiments to determine metabolic fluxes in hybridoma cells

✍ Scribed by Hendrik P. J. Bonarius; Bram Timmerarends; Cornelis D. de Gooijer; Johannes Tramper


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
154 KB
Volume
58
Category
Article
ISSN
0006-3592

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✦ Synopsis


The estimation of intracellular fluxes of mammalian cells using only mass balances of the relevant metabolites is not possible because the set of linear equations defined by these mass balances is underdetermined. In order to quantify fluxes in cyclic pathways the mass balance equations can be complemented with several constraints: (1) the mass balances of co-metabolites, such as ATP or NAD(P)H, (2) linear objective functions, (3) flux data obtained by isotopic-tracer experiments.

Here, these three methods are compared for the analysis of fluxes in the primary metabolism of continuously cultured hybridoma cells. The significance of different theoretical constraints and different objective functions is discussed after comparing their resulting flux distributions to the fluxes determined using 13 CO 2 and 13 C-lactate measurements of 1 -13 C-glucose-fed hybridoma cells. Metabolic fluxes estimated using the objective functions ''maximize ATP'' and ''maximize NADH'' are relatively similar to the experimentally determined fluxes. This is consistent with the observation that cancer cells, such as hybridomas, are metabolically hyperactive, and produce ATP and NADH regardless of the need for these cofactors.


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