Top Down Metabolic Control Analysis of Oxidative Phosphorylation at Different Rates in Potato Tuber Mitochondria

Author(s):  
Adolf Kesseler ◽  
Philippe Diolez ◽  
Klaus Brinkmann ◽  
Martin D. Brand
2000 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Soboll ◽  
G. C. Brown

In this study the network of ATP-consuming and -producing reactions, interacting via the cytosolic ATP/ADP + P1 system, was studied for the first time in an intact organ, the isolated perfused rat liver, using top-down metabolic-control analysis. Flux control in the metabolically resting state (only oxidative phosphorylation and ion pumps active) was only in the ATP-consumers, whereas in the metabolically active state (biosyntheses and ion-pumping ATPases active) most control over oxidative phosphorylation was in itself and some control was in ion-pumping ATPases. All ATP-consumers had high control over themselves, and ion-pumping ATPases had high negative control over the other ATP-consuming branches. Oxidative phosphorylation had high positive control over ATP-consuming reactions exept for ion-pumping ATPases. It is concluded that in the active state ATP-consumers compete for cytosolic ATP, but as the ion-pumping ATPases and oxidative phosphorylation are less sensitive towards the cytosolic ATP, other ATP-consumers have low control over these pathways.


1997 ◽  
Vol 322 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon THOMAS ◽  
Peter J. F. MOONEY ◽  
Michael M. BURRELL ◽  
David A. FELL

We have applied Metabolic Control Analysis (MCA) in an attempt to determine the distribution of glycolytic flux control between the steps of glycolysis in aged disks of potato tuber under aerobic conditions, using concentrations of glycolytic metabolites in tuber tissue from a range of transgenic potato plants and published enzyme kinetic data. We modelled the substrate and effector kinetics of potato tuber phosphofructokinase (PFK) by reanalysing published results. Despite the scarcity of reliable kinetic data, our results are in agreement with experimental findings namely that, under the conditions described, PFK has little control over glycolytic flux. Furthermore our analysis predicts that under these conditions far more control lies in the dephosphorylation of phosphoenolpyruvate and/or in the steps beyond. We have validated the results of our analysis in two ways. First, predictions based on calculated concentration control coefficients from the analysis show generally good agreement with observed metabolite deviation indices discussed in the preceding paper [Thomas, Mooney, Burrell, and Fell (1997) Biochem. J.322, 111Ő117]. Second, sensitivity analysis of our results shows that the calculated control coefficients are robust to errors in the elasticities used in the analysis, of which relatively few need to be known accurately. Experimental and control analysis results agree with previous predictions of MCA that strong co-operative feedback inhibition of enzymes serves to move flux control downstream of the inhibiting metabolite. We conclude that MCA can successfully model the outcome of experiments in the genetic manipulation of enzyme amounts.


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