Systems biology from micro-organisms to human metabolic diseases: the role of detailed kinetic models

Author:

Bakker Barbara M.123,van Eunen Karen13,Jeneson Jeroen A.L.34,van Riel Natal A.W.34,Bruggeman Frank J.23,Teusink Bas23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Liver, Digestive and Metabolic Diseases, University Medical Centre Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands

2. Netherlands Institute for Systems Biology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

3. Netherlands Consortium for Systems Biology, The Netherlands

4. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands

Abstract

Human metabolic diseases are typically network diseases. This holds not only for multifactorial diseases, such as metabolic syndrome or Type 2 diabetes, but even when a single gene defect is the primary cause, where the adaptive response of the entire network determines the severity of disease. The latter may differ between individuals carrying the same mutation. Understanding the adaptive responses of human metabolism naturally requires a systems biology approach. Modelling of metabolic pathways in micro-organisms and some mammalian tissues has yielded many insights, qualitative as well as quantitative, into their control and regulation. Yet, even for a well-known pathway such as glycolysis, precise predictions of metabolite dynamics from experimentally determined enzyme kinetics have been only moderately successful. In the present review, we compare kinetic models of glycolysis in three cell types (African trypanosomes, yeast and skeletal muscle), evaluate their predictive power and identify limitations in our understanding. Although each of these models has its own merits and shortcomings, they also share common features. For example, in each case independently measured enzyme kinetic parameters were used as input. Based on these ‘lessons from glycolysis’, we will discuss how to make best use of kinetic computer models to advance our understanding of human metabolic diseases.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Biochemistry

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