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Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure

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Page 1: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Lecture #8

Stoichiometric Structure

Page 2: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Outline

• Cofactors and carriers• Bi-linear nature of reactions• Pathways versus cofactors• Basics of high energy bond exchange• Prototypic pathway models

Page 3: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Cofactors and Carriers

Page 4: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Basic Cofactor/Carrier Molecules in Metabolism

Page 5: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Some examples

Page 6: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Vitamins

Page 7: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

The Bi-linear Nature of Biochemical Reactions: transfer/exchange of properties

Donor (X)

Carrier (C)Property (A)

Acceptor (Y)

Motif:

transferred/exchanged moietytransferred/exchanged moiety

Many donors

ATP ADP

Many, many acceptors

Highly connectedcarriers:

t 1min≅

Page 8: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

PATHWAY VS. KEY COFACTOR VIEW

Page 9: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Redox Trafficking in the Core Metabolic Pathways:

pathway view

classical viewpointclassical viewpoint

Page 10: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Redox Trafficking in the Core Metabolic Pathways:cofactor view

A tangle of cycles through pools

systems viewpoint

Page 11: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

HIGH ENERGY PHOSPHATE GROUP EXCHANGE

Page 12: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

The Basics of High-Energy Phosphate Bond Trafficking

Page 13: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

1. Basic Equations

ATP ADPvform

vuse

AMP ADP

vdistr+ -

Input/Output~0.0

= 0

(+I/O)

Page 14: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Dynamic Response to a Load Perturbation

ATP ADP

AMP ADP

50% increase in kuse

dynamic phaseportrait of fluxes

Page 15: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Graphical Representation of Charge and Capacity

fast

slow

here, capacity is constant at 4.2 mM since there are no I/O on the carrier molecule

(Reich, J.G. and Sel’kov, E.E., Energy Metabolism of the CellAcademic Press, New York, 1981).

Page 16: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

2. Buffer on Energy Storage

is creatine in mammalian tissues

buffermolecule

Page 17: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Dynamic Response

btot =10Kbuff =1kbuff =1000

total capacity with buffer

same change as before

Page 18: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

3. Open System: AMP made and degraded

ATP ADP

AMP ADP

10

0.03 mM/min

dAMPdt

=vamp,form-vamp,drain+vdistr

≠ 0

form

drain

Page 19: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Dynamic Response to a Load Perturbation (kuse,ATP50%)

(flux phase portraits)

Page 20: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Occupancy2ATP+ADPp(t)=Px(t)

Dynamic Response:capacity and charge

Capacity(ATP+ADP+AMP)

fast response

slow response

Page 21: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Charge and Capacity: Both Dynamic

fast

slow

Page 22: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

PROTOTYPIC METABOLIC PATHWAYS WITH COFACTORS

Page 23: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

C) Energy bonds for charging < recoveryD) The basic structure of pathways: it takes P ($) to make P ($)

Open System:charging and discharging metabolites

enabling a load to be placed on a system

Page 24: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Dynamic Responses to a Load Perturbation

Fast Slow

Page 25: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Dynamic Response (con’t)(flux phase portrait)

Page 26: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Differences from the un-coupled module

• The pathway input flux is fixed – Thus the ADP->ATP will be fixed– System will return to the original steady

state

• The ATP rate of use is increased 50% as before

Page 27: Lecture #8 Stoichiometric Structure. Outline Cofactors and carriers Bi-linear nature of reactions Pathways versus cofactors Basics of high energy bond

Summary• The bi-linear properties of biochemical reactions lead to complex patterns

of exchange of key chemical moieties and properties. • Many such simultaneous exchange processes lead to a `tangle of cycles' in

biochemical reaction networks.• Skeleton (or scaffold) dynamic models of biochemical processes can be

carried out using dynamic mass balances based on elementary reaction representations and mass action kinetics.

• Many dynamic properties are a result of the stoichiometric texture and do not result from intricate regulatory mechanisms or complex kinetic expressions.

• Complex kinetic models are built in a bottom-up fashion, adding more and more details in a step-wise fashion making sure that every new feature is consistently integrated.

• Once dynamic network models are formulated, the perturbations to which we simulate their responses are in fluxes, typically the exchange and demand fluxes.

• A recurring theme is the formation of pools and the state of those pools in terms of how their total concentration is distributed among its constituent members.

• The time scales are typically separated.