Thermodynamic Constraints in Kinetic Modeling: Thermodynamic-Kinetic Modeling in Comparison to Other Approaches

Kinetic models of reaction networks may easily violate the laws of thermodynamics and the principle of detailed balance. In large network models, the constraints that are imposed by these laws are particularly difficult to address. This hinders modeling of biochemical reaction networks. Thermodynami...

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Veröffentlicht in:Engineering in life sciences 2008-10, Vol.8 (5), p.467-476
Hauptverfasser: Ederer, M., Gilles, E. D.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Kinetic models of reaction networks may easily violate the laws of thermodynamics and the principle of detailed balance. In large network models, the constraints that are imposed by these laws are particularly difficult to address. This hinders modeling of biochemical reaction networks. Thermodynamic‐kinetic modeling is a method that provides a thermodynamically sound and formally appealing way for deriving dynamic model equations of reaction systems. State variables of this approach are thermokinetic potentials that describe the ability of compounds to drive a reaction. A compound has a parameter called capacity, which is the ratio of its concentration and thermokinetic potential. A reaction is described by its resistance which is the ratio of the thermokinetic driving force and flux. In these aspects, the formalism is similar to the modeling formalism for electrical networks and an analogous graphical representation is possible. The thermodynamic‐kinetic modeling formalism is equivalent to the traditional kinetic modeling formalism with the exception that it is not possible to build thermodynamically infeasible models. Here, the thermodynamic‐kinetic modeling formalism is reviewed, compared to other approaches, and some of its advantages are worked out. In contrast to other approaches, thermodynamic‐kinetic modeling does not rely on an explicit enumeration of stoichiometric cycles. It is capable of describing rate laws far from equilibrium. Further, the parameterization by capacities and resistances is particularly intuitive and powerful. Thermodynamic‐Kinetic Modeling (TKM) is a modeling formalism that structurally guarantees the thermodynamic feasibility of kinetic models by introducing flux‐force relationships. This is crucial in particular for large metabolic network models. Here, TKM is reviewed and compared with several alternative approaches.
ISSN:1618-0240
1618-2863
DOI:10.1002/elsc.200800040