Flux-Enabled Exploration of the Role of Sip1 in Galactose Yeast Metabolism
C metabolic flux analysis ( C MFA) is an important systems biology technique that has been used to investigate microbial metabolism for decades. The heterotrimer Snf1 kinase complex plays a key role in the preference exhibits for glucose over galactose, a phenomenon known as glucose repression or ca...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Frontiers in bioengineering and biotechnology 2017-05, Vol.5, p.31-31 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | C metabolic flux analysis (
C MFA) is an important systems biology technique that has been used to investigate microbial metabolism for decades. The heterotrimer Snf1 kinase complex plays a key role in the preference
exhibits for glucose over galactose, a phenomenon known as glucose repression or carbon catabolite repression. The
gene, encoding a part of this complex, has received little attention, presumably, because its knockout lacks a growth phenotype. We present a fluxomic investigation of the relative effects of the presence of galactose in classically glucose-repressing media and/or knockout of
using a multi-scale variant of
C MFA known as 2-Scale
C metabolic flux analysis (2S-
C MFA). In this study, all strains have the galactose metabolism deactivated (
Δ background) so as to be able to separate the metabolic effects purely related to glucose repression from those arising from galactose metabolism. The resulting flux profiles reveal that the presence of galactose in classically glucose-repressing conditions, for a CEN.PK113-7D
Δ background, results in a substantial decrease in pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) flux and increased flow from cytosolic pyruvate and malate through the mitochondria toward cytosolic branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis. These fluxomic redistributions are accompanied by a higher maximum specific growth rate, both seemingly in violation of glucose repression. Deletion of
in the CEN.PK113-7D
Δ cells grown in mixed glucose/galactose medium results in a further increase. Knockout of this gene in cells grown in glucose-only medium results in no change in growth rate and a corresponding decrease in glucose and ethanol exchange fluxes and flux through pathways involved in aspartate/threonine biosynthesis. Glucose repression appears to be violated at a 1/10 ratio of galactose-to-glucose. Based on the scientific literature, we may have conducted our experiments near a critical sugar ratio that is known to allow galactose to enter the cell. Additionally, we report a number of fluxomic changes associated with these growth rate increases and unexpected flux profile redistributions resulting from deletion of
in glucose-only medium. |
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ISSN: | 2296-4185 2296-4185 |
DOI: | 10.3389/fbioe.2017.00031 |