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Metabolic Adaptation Processes That Converge to Optimal Biomass Flux Distributions

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  • Claudio Altafini
  • Giuseppe Facchetti

Abstract

In simple organisms like E.coli, the metabolic response to an external perturbation passes through a transient phase in which the activation of a number of latent pathways can guarantee survival at the expenses of growth. Growth is gradually recovered as the organism adapts to the new condition. This adaptation can be modeled as a process of repeated metabolic adjustments obtained through the resilencings of the non-essential metabolic reactions, using growth rate as selection probability for the phenotypes obtained. The resulting metabolic adaptation process tends naturally to steer the metabolic fluxes towards high growth phenotypes. Quite remarkably, when applied to the central carbon metabolism of E.coli, it follows that nearly all flux distributions converge to the flux vector representing optimal growth, i.e., the solution of the biomass optimization problem turns out to be the dominant attractor of the metabolic adaptation process.Author Summary: In modeling metabolic networks, concepts like biomass optimization are often used to determine flux distributions of simple organisms such as E.coli. Although they often give good results in practice, they normally rely on heuristic considerations like “evolution has tuned metabolic fluxes to optimize growth, hence optimizing growth gives reasonable fluxes”. The main result of this paper is to show that metabolic adaptation naturally leads to optimal growth, in the sense that the flux distribution associated to optimal growth is the dominant attractor of the fitness landscape of the metabolic adaptation process.

Suggested Citation

  • Claudio Altafini & Giuseppe Facchetti, 2015. "Metabolic Adaptation Processes That Converge to Optimal Biomass Flux Distributions," PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(9), pages 1-13, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1004434
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004434
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Rafael U. Ibarra & Jeremy S. Edwards & Bernhard O. Palsson, 2002. "Escherichia coli K-12 undergoes adaptive evolution to achieve in silico predicted optimal growth," Nature, Nature, vol. 420(6912), pages 186-189, November.
    2. Kim, Jaehoon & Kim, Sangsin, 2015. "2012년 국회법 개정의 효과 연구 [A Study on the Effect of the 2012 National Assembly Act Amendment]," KDI Research Monographs, Korea Development Institute (KDI), volume 127, number v:2015-03(k):y:2015:p:1-1.
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