Energy metabolism controls phenotypes by protein efficiency and allocation
Journal article, 2019

Cells require energy for growth and maintenance and have evolved to have multiple pathways to produce energy in response to varying conditions. A basic question in this context is how cells organize energy metabolism, which is, however, challenging to elucidate due to its complexity, i.e., the energy-producing pathways overlap with each other and even intertwine with biomass formation pathways. Here, we propose a modeling concept that decomposes energy metabolism into biomass formation and ATP-producing pathways. The latter can be further decomposed into a high-yield and a low-yield pathway. This enables independent estimation of protein efficiency for each pathway. With this concept, we modeled energy metabolism for Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae and found that the high-yield pathway shows lower protein efficiency than the low-yield pathway. Taken together with a fixed protein constraint, we predict overflow metabolism in E. coli and the Crabtree effect in S. cerevisiae, meaning that energy metabolism is sufficient to explain the metabolic switches. The static protein constraint is supported by the findings that protein mass of energy metabolism is conserved across conditions based on absolute proteomics data. This also suggests that enzymes may have decreased saturation or activity at low glucose uptake rates. Finally, our analyses point out three ways to improve growth, i.e., increasing protein allocation to energy metabolism, decreasing ATP demand, or increasing activity for key enzymes.

Saccharomyces cerevisiae

metabolic switch

constraint-based modeling

Escherichia coli

growth rate

Author

Yu Chen

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Jens B Nielsen

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

0027-8424 (ISSN) 1091-6490 (eISSN)

Vol. 116 35 17592-17597

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Biophysics

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1073/pnas.1906569116

PubMed

31405984

More information

Latest update

10/9/2022