PNAS 2015-01-20

Model-driven discovery of underground metabolic functions in Escherichia coli.

Gabriela I Guzmán, José Utrilla, Sergey Nurk, Elizabeth Brunk, Jonathan M Monk, Ali Ebrahim, Bernhard O Palsson, Adam M Feist

Index: Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 112(3) , 929-34, (2015)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Enzyme promiscuity toward substrates has been discussed in evolutionary terms as providing the flexibility to adapt to novel environments. In the present work, we describe an approach toward exploring such enzyme promiscuity in the space of a metabolic network. This approach leverages genome-scale models, which have been widely used for predicting growth phenotypes in various environments or following a genetic perturbation; however, these predictions occasionally fail. Failed predictions of gene essentiality offer an opportunity for targeting biological discovery, suggesting the presence of unknown underground pathways stemming from enzymatic cross-reactivity. We demonstrate a workflow that couples constraint-based modeling and bioinformatic tools with KO strain analysis and adaptive laboratory evolution for the purpose of predicting promiscuity at the genome scale. Three cases of genes that are incorrectly predicted as essential in Escherichia coli--aspC, argD, and gltA--are examined, and isozyme functions are uncovered for each to a different extent. Seven isozyme functions based on genetic and transcriptional evidence are suggested between the genes aspC and tyrB, argD and astC, gabT and puuE, and gltA and prpC. This study demonstrates how a targeted model-driven approach to discovery can systematically fill knowledge gaps, characterize underground metabolism, and elucidate regulatory mechanisms of adaptation in response to gene KO perturbations.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

The protein phosphatase Siw14 controls caffeine-induced nuclear localization and phosphorylation of Gln3 via the type 2A protein phosphatases Pph21 and Pph22 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

2015-01-01

[J. Biochem. 157(1) , 53-64, (2015)]

Functional study of the Hap4-like genes suggests that the key regulators of carbon metabolism HAP4 and oxidative stress response YAP1 in yeast diverged from a common ancestor.

2014-01-01

[PLoS ONE 9(12) , e112263, (2014)]

The tyrosine phosphatase PTPN14 (Pez) inhibits metastasis by altering protein trafficking.

2015-02-17

[Sci. Signal. 8(364) , ra18, (2015)]

In vitro inhibition of lysine decarboxylase activity by organophosphate esters.

2014-07-01

[Biochem. Pharmacol. 92(3) , 506-16, (2014)]

AMBRA1 links autophagy to cell proliferation and tumorigenesis by promoting c-Myc dephosphorylation and degradation.

2015-01-01

[Nat. Cell Biol. 17(1) , 20-30, (2014)]

More Articles...