1. The self-inhibitory nature of metabolic networks and its alleviation through compartmentalization
- Author
-
Markus A. Keller, Aleksej Zelezniak, Ben F. Luisi, Markus Ralser, Mohammad Tauqeer Alam, Anna Stincone, and Viridiana Olin-Sandoval
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Science ,Allosteric regulation ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Dehydrogenase ,Biology ,Models, Biological ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Triosephosphate isomerase ,03 medical and health sciences ,Metabolomics ,Allosteric Regulation ,Oxidoreductase ,Metabolome ,Humans ,Feedback, Physiological ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Multidisciplinary ,General Chemistry ,Compartmentalization (psychology) ,Biological Evolution ,QP ,Cell Compartmentation ,Enzymes ,030104 developmental biology ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Metabolic Networks and Pathways - Abstract
Metabolites can inhibit the enzymes that generate them. To explore the general nature of metabolic self-inhibition, we surveyed enzymological data accrued from a century of experimentation and generated a genome-scale enzyme-inhibition network. Enzyme inhibition is often driven by essential metabolites, affects the majority of biochemical processes, and is executed by a structured network whose topological organization is reflecting chemical similarities that exist between metabolites. Most inhibitory interactions are competitive, emerge in the close neighbourhood of the inhibited enzymes, and result from structural similarities between substrate and inhibitors. Structural constraints also explain one-third of allosteric inhibitors, a finding rationalized by crystallographic analysis of allosterically inhibited L-lactate dehydrogenase. Our findings suggest that the primary cause of metabolic enzyme inhibition is not the evolution of regulatory metabolite–enzyme interactions, but a finite structural diversity prevalent within the metabolome. In eukaryotes, compartmentalization minimizes inevitable enzyme inhibition and alleviates constraints that self-inhibition places on metabolism., Metabolites act as enzyme inhibitors, but their global impact on metabolism has scarcely been considered. Here, the authors generate a human genome-wide metabolite-enzyme inhibition network, and find that inhibition occurs largely due to limited structural diversity of metabolites, leading to a global constraint on metabolism which subcellular compartmentalization minimizes.
- Published
- 2017