Publication | Closed Access
A Computational Procedure for Optimal Engineering Interventions Using Kinetic Models of Metabolism
36
Citations
40
References
2006
Year
EngineeringCentral Carbon MetabolismMetabolic NetworksMetabolic ModelMetabolic NetworkBiosynthesisBioenergeticsBiochemical EngineeringMetabolic EngineeringBiostatisticsMetabolic Pathway AnalysisIntermediary MetabolismPathway EngineeringChemical BiotechnologyBiochemistryMetabolic ControlComputational ProcedureGeneral Computational ProcedurePhysiologyBiotechnologySynthetic BiologyMicrobiologyMetabolismMedicineChemical Kinetics
The identification of optimal intervention strategies is a key step in designing microbial strains with enhanced capabilities. In this paper, we propose a general computational procedure to determine which genes/enzymes should be eliminated, repressed or overexpressed to maximize the flux through a product of interest for general kinetic models. The procedure relies on the generalized linearization of a kinetic description of the investigated metabolic system and the iterative application of mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) optimization to hierarchically identify all engineering interventions allowing for reaction eliminations and/or enzyme level modulations. The effect of the magnitude of the allowed changes in concentrations and enzyme levels is investigated, and a variant of the method to explore high-fold changes in enzyme levels is also analyzed. The proposed framework is demonstrated using a kinetic model modeling part of the central carbon metabolism of E. coli for serine overproduction. The proposed computational procedure is a general approach that can be applied to any metabolic system for which a kinetic description is provided.
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