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Integrating highly quantitative proteomics and genome-scale metabolic modeling to study pH adaptation in the human pathogen

Authors :
Ruth, Großeholz
Ching-Chiek, Koh
Nadine, Veith
Tomas, Fiedler
Madlen, Strauss
Brett, Olivier
Ben C, Collins
Olga T, Schubert
Frank, Bergmann
Bernd, Kreikemeyer
Ruedi, Aebersold
Ursula, Kummer
Source :
NPJ Systems Biology and Applications
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Genome-scale metabolic models represent the entirety of metabolic reactions of an organism based on the annotation of the respective genome. These models commonly allow all reactions to proceed concurrently, disregarding the fact that at no point all proteins will be present in a cell. The metabolic reaction space can be constrained to a more physiological state using experimentally obtained information on enzyme abundances. However, high-quality, genome-wide protein measurements have been challenging and typically transcript abundances have been used as a surrogate for protein measurements. With recent developments in mass spectrometry-based proteomics, exemplified by SWATH-MS, the acquisition of highly quantitative proteome-wide data at reasonable throughput has come within reach. Here we present methodology to integrate such proteome-wide data into genome-scale models. We applied this methodology to study cellular changes in Enterococcus faecalis during adaptation to low pH. Our results indicate reduced proton production in the central metabolism and decreased membrane permeability for protons due to different membrane composition. We conclude that proteomic data constrain genome-scale models to a physiological state and, in return, genome-scale models are useful tools to contextualize proteomic data.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

ISSN :
20567189
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NPJ systems biology and applications
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........3aa3ece2a6389090e246966861ce8a14