Affiliation:
1. Donald Danforth Plant Science Center 975 North Warson Road St Louis MO 63132 USA
2. United States Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service 975 North Warson Road St Louis MO 63132 USA
Abstract
SummaryMetabolic flux analysis (MFA) is a valuable tool for quantifying cellular phenotypes and to guide plant metabolic engineering. By introducing stable isotopic tracers and employing mathematical models, MFA can quantify the rates of metabolic reactions through biochemical pathways. Recent applications of isotopically nonstationary MFA (INST‐MFA) to plants have elucidated nonintuitive metabolism in leaves under optimal and stress conditions, described coupled fluxes for fast‐growing algae, and produced a synergistic multi‐organ flux map that is a first in MFA for any biological system. These insights could not be elucidated through other approaches and show the potential of INST‐MFA to correct an oversimplified understanding of plant metabolism.
Funder
National Science Foundation
National Institute of Food and Agriculture