scholarly journals tcaSIM: A Simulation Program for Optimal Design of 13C Tracer Experiments for Analysis of Metabolic Flux by NMR and Mass Spectroscopy

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 176-187
Author(s):  
Jeffry R. Alger ◽  
A. Dean Sherry ◽  
Craig R. Malloy
2005 ◽  
Vol 33 (6) ◽  
pp. 1421-1422 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Yang ◽  
S. Wongsa ◽  
V. Kadirkamanathan ◽  
S.A. Billings ◽  
P.C. Wright

Metabolic flux analysis using 13C-tracer experiments is an important tool in metabolic engineering since intracellular fluxes are non-measurable quantities in vivo. Current metabolic flux analysis approaches are fully based on stoichiometric constraints and carbon atom balances, where the over-determined system is iteratively solved by a parameter estimation approach. However, the unavoidable measurement noises involved in the fractional enrichment data obtained by 13C-enrichment experiment and the possible existence of unknown pathways prevent a simple parameter estimation method for intracellular flux quantification. The MCMC (Markov chain–Monte Carlo) method, which obtains intracellular flux distributions through delicately constructed Markov chains, is shown to be an effective approach for deep understanding of the intracellular metabolic network. Its application is illustrated through the simulation of an example metabolic network.


Author(s):  
Karsten Schmidt ◽  
Achim Marx ◽  
Albert A. de Graaf ◽  
Wolfgang Wiechert ◽  
Hermann Sahm ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ari Rantanen ◽  
Juho Rousu ◽  
Paula Jouhten ◽  
Nicola Zamboni ◽  
Hannu Maaheimo ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 311 (4) ◽  
pp. H881-H891 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott B. Crown ◽  
Joanne K. Kelleher ◽  
Rosanne Rouf ◽  
Deborah M. Muoio ◽  
Maciek R. Antoniewicz

In many forms of cardiomyopathy, alterations in energy substrate metabolism play a key role in disease pathogenesis. Stable isotope tracing in rodent heart perfusion systems can be used to determine cardiac metabolic fluxes, namely those relative fluxes that contribute to pyruvate, the acetyl-CoA pool, and pyruvate anaplerosis, which are critical to cardiac homeostasis. Methods have previously been developed to interrogate these relative fluxes using isotopomer enrichments of measured metabolites and algebraic equations to determine a predefined metabolic flux model. However, this approach is exquisitely sensitive to measurement error, thus precluding accurate relative flux parameter determination. In this study, we applied a novel mathematical approach to determine relative cardiac metabolic fluxes using 13C-metabolic flux analysis (13C-MFA) aided by multiple tracer experiments and integrated data analysis. Using 13C-MFA, we validated a metabolic network model to explain myocardial energy substrate metabolism. Four different 13C-labeled substrates were queried (i.e., glucose, lactate, pyruvate, and oleate) based on a previously published study. We integrated the analysis of the complete set of isotopomer data gathered from these mouse heart perfusion experiments into a single comprehensive network model that delineates substrate contributions to both pyruvate and acetyl-CoA pools at a greater resolution than that offered by traditional methods using algebraic equations. To our knowledge, this is the first rigorous application of 13C-MFA to interrogate data from multiple tracer experiments in the perfused heart. We anticipate that this approach can be used widely to study energy substrate metabolism in this and other similar biological systems.


2010 ◽  
Vol 139-141 ◽  
pp. 877-880
Author(s):  
Shu Bin Ou ◽  
Zhi Zhen Qiu ◽  
Xiao Yi Wang ◽  
Li Ya Hou

. A new bionic biped walking mechanism (BWM) was put forward in this paper. Simple in construction, easy in control and droved by usual motor are all advantages of this mechanism. But disadvantage should not be ignored. Especially up and down bumpy of the centroid will influence the smoothness of the motion during walk. Through theoretical analysis of kinematics, motion characteristics and the movement of the spindle were obtained in a circle. To aim to bring down the uneven of the BWM, the relationship of all parameters was found and the scope of the fluctuation was established. In the end, all of the results were verified by simulation program of Matlab. The result provided theoretical guidance for optimal design of the mechanism in the further research.


Metabolites ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 63 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Feith ◽  
Attila Teleki ◽  
Michaela Graf ◽  
Lorenzo Favilli ◽  
Ralf Takors

Dynamic 13C-tracer-based flux analyses of in vivo reaction networks still require a continuous development of advanced quantification methods applying state-of-the-art mass spectrometry platforms. Utilizing alkaline HILIC chromatography, we adapt strategies for a systematic quantification study in non- and 13C-labeled multicomponent endogenous Corynebacterium glutamicum extracts by LC-QTOF high resolution (HRMS) and LC-QQQ tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Without prior derivatization, a representative cross-section of 17 central carbon and anabolic key intermediates were analyzed with high selectivity and sensitivity under optimized ESI-MS settings. In column detection limits for the absolute quantification range were between 6.8–304.7 (QQQ) and 28.7–881.5 fmol (QTOF) with comparable linearities (3–5 orders of magnitude) and enhanced precision using QQQ-MRM detection. Tailor-made preparations of uniformly (U)13C-labeled cultivation extracts for isotope dilution mass spectrometry enabled the accurate quantification in complex sample matrices and extended linearities without effect on method parameters. Furthermore, evaluation of metabolite-specific m+1-to-m+0 ratios (ISR1:0) in non-labeled extracts exhibited sufficient methodical spectral accuracies with mean deviations of 3.89 ± 3.54% (QTOF) and 4.01 ± 3.01% (QQQ). Based on the excellent HILIC performance, conformity analysis of time-resolved isotopic enrichments in 13C-tracer experiments revealed sufficient spectral accuracy for QQQ-SIM detection. However, only QTOF-HRMS ensures determination of the full isotopologue space in complex matrices without mass interferences.


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