TY - JOUR
T1 - Minimal metabolic pathway structure is consistent with associated biomolecular interactions
AU - Bordbar, Aarash
AU - Nagarajan, Harish
AU - Lewis, Nathan E.
AU - Latif, Haythem
AU - Ebrahim, Ali
AU - Federowicz, Stephen
AU - Schellenberger, Jan
AU - Palsson, Bernhard O.
PY - 2014/7
Y1 - 2014/7
N2 - Pathways are a universal paradigm for functionally describing cellular processes. Even though advances in high-throughput data generation have transformed biology, the core of our biological understanding, and hence data interpretation, is still predicated on human-defined pathways. Here, we introduce an unbiased, pathway structure for genome-scale metabolic networks defined based on principles of parsimony that do not mimic canonical human-defined textbook pathways. Instead, these minimal pathways better describe multiple independent pathway-associated biomolecular interaction datasets suggesting a functional organization for metabolism based on parsimonious use of cellular components. We use the inherent predictive capability of these pathways to experimentally discover novel transcriptional regulatory interactions in Escherichia coli metabolism for three transcription factors, effectively doubling the known regulatory roles for Nac and MntR. This study suggests an underlying and fundamental principle in the evolutionary selection of pathway structures; namely, that pathways may be minimal, independent, and segregated.
AB - Pathways are a universal paradigm for functionally describing cellular processes. Even though advances in high-throughput data generation have transformed biology, the core of our biological understanding, and hence data interpretation, is still predicated on human-defined pathways. Here, we introduce an unbiased, pathway structure for genome-scale metabolic networks defined based on principles of parsimony that do not mimic canonical human-defined textbook pathways. Instead, these minimal pathways better describe multiple independent pathway-associated biomolecular interaction datasets suggesting a functional organization for metabolism based on parsimonious use of cellular components. We use the inherent predictive capability of these pathways to experimentally discover novel transcriptional regulatory interactions in Escherichia coli metabolism for three transcription factors, effectively doubling the known regulatory roles for Nac and MntR. This study suggests an underlying and fundamental principle in the evolutionary selection of pathway structures; namely, that pathways may be minimal, independent, and segregated.
KW - constraint-based modeling
KW - genetic interactions
KW - pathway analysis
KW - protein-protein interactions
KW - transcriptional regulatory networks
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84905403664
U2 - 10.15252/msb.20145243
DO - 10.15252/msb.20145243
M3 - Article
C2 - 24987116
SN - 1744-4292
VL - 10
JO - Molecular Systems Biology
JF - Molecular Systems Biology
IS - 7
M1 - 737
ER -