Teusink2006 - Genome-scale metabolic network of Lactobacillus plantarum (iBT721)

Model Identifier
MODEL1507180045
Short description
Teusink2006 - Genome-scale metabolic network of Lactobacillus plantarum (iBT721)

This model is described in the article:

Teusink B, Wiersma A, Molenaar D, Francke C, de Vos WM, Siezen RJ, Smid EJ.
J. Biol. Chem. 2006 Dec; 281(52): 40041-40048

Abstract:

A genome-scale metabolic model of the lactic acid bacterium Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS1 was constructed based on genomic content and experimental data. The complete model includes 721 genes, 643 reactions, and 531 metabolites. Different stoichiometric modeling techniques were used for interpretation of complex fermentation data, as L. plantarum is adapted to nutrient-rich environments and only grows in media supplemented with vitamins and amino acids. (i) Based on experimental input and output fluxes, maximal ATP production was estimated and related to growth rate. (ii) Optimization of ATP production further identified amino acid catabolic pathways that were not previously associated with free-energy metabolism. (iii) Genome-scale elementary flux mode analysis identified 28 potential futile cycles. (iv) Flux variability analysis supplemented the elementary mode analysis in identifying parallel pathways, e.g. pathways with identical end products but different co-factor usage. Strongly increased flexibility in the metabolic network was observed when strict coupling between catabolic ATP production and anabolic consumption was relaxed. These results illustrate how a genome-scale metabolic model and associated constraint-based modeling techniques can be used to analyze the physiology of growth on a complex medium rather than a minimal salts medium. However, optimization of biomass formation using the Flux Balance Analysis approach, reported to successfully predict growth rate and by product formation in Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, predicted too high biomass yields that were incompatible with the observed lactate production. The reason is that this approach assumes optimal efficiency of substrate to biomass conversion, and can therefore not predict the metabolically inefficient lactate formation.

To the extent possible under law, all copyright and related or neighbouring rights to this encoded model have been dedicated to the public domain worldwide. Please refer to CC0 Public Domain Dedication for more information.

Format
SBML (L3V1)
Related Publication
  • Analysis of growth of Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS1 on a complex medium using a genome-scale metabolic model.
  • Bas Teusink, Anne Wiersma, Douwe Molenaar, Christof Francke, Willem M de Vos, Roland J Siezen, Eddy J Smid
  • The Journal of biological chemistry , 12/ 2006 , Volume 281 , Issue 52 , pages: 40041-40048 , PubMed ID: 17062565
Contributors
Submitter of the first revision: Nicolas Le Novère
Submitter of this revision: Nicolas Le Novère
Modeller: Nicolas Le Novère

Metadata information

is (1 statement)
BioModels Database MODEL1507180045

hasProperty (1 statement)
Mathematical Modelling Ontology Constraint-based model


Curation status
Non-curated

Modelling approach(es)

Original model(s)
https://github.com/opencobra/m_model_collection/tree/master/sbml3

Connected external resources