Kholodenko B N, Rohwer J M, Cascante M, Westerhoff H V
A.N. Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia.
Mol Cell Biochem. 1998 Jul;184(1-2):311-20.
Because of its importance to cell function, the free-energy metabolism of the living cell is subtly and homeostatically controlled. Metabolic control analysis enables a quantitative determination of what controls the relevant fluxes. However, the original metabolic control analysis was developed for idealized metabolic systems, which were assumed to lack enzyme-enzyme association and direct metabolite transfer between enzymes (channelling). We here review the recently developed molecular control analysis, which makes it possible to study non-ideal (channelled, organized) systems quantitatively in terms of what controls the fluxes, concentrations, and transit times. We show that in real, non-ideal pathways, the central control laws, such as the summation theorem for flux control, are richer than in ideal systems: the sum of the control of the enzymes participating in a non-ideal pathway may well exceed one (the number expected in the ideal pathways), but may also drop to values below one. Precise expressions indicate how total control is determined by non-ideal phenomena such as ternary complex formation (two enzymes, one metabolite), and enzyme sequestration. The bacterial phosphotransferase system (PTS), which catalyses the uptake and concomitant phosphorylation of glucose (and also regulates catabolite repression) is analyzed as an experimental example of a non-ideal pathway. Here, the phosphoryl group is channelled between enzymes, which could increase the sum of the enzyme control coefficients to two, whereas the formation of ternary complexes could decrease the sum of the enzyme control coefficients to below one. Experimental studies have recently confirmed this identification, as well as theoretically predicted values for the total control. Macromolecular crowding was shown to be a major candidate for the factor that modulates the non-ideal behaviour of the PTS pathway and the sum of the enzyme control coefficients.
由于其对细胞功能的重要性,活细胞的自由能代谢受到精细且稳态的控制。代谢控制分析能够定量确定是什么控制了相关通量。然而,最初的代谢控制分析是针对理想化的代谢系统开发的,这些系统被假定缺乏酶 - 酶关联以及酶之间的直接代谢物转移(通道化)。我们在此回顾最近发展的分子控制分析,它使得从控制通量、浓度和转运时间的角度对非理想(通道化、有组织的)系统进行定量研究成为可能。我们表明,在真实的非理想途径中,诸如通量控制的加法定理等核心控制定律比在理想系统中更为丰富:参与非理想途径的酶的控制之和很可能超过一(理想途径中预期的数字),但也可能降至低于一的值。精确的表达式表明总控制是如何由诸如三元复合物形成(两种酶,一种代谢物)和酶隔离等非理想现象所决定的。细菌磷酸转移酶系统(PTS),它催化葡萄糖的摄取并伴随磷酸化(并且还调节分解代谢物阻遏),作为非理想途径的一个实验例子进行了分析。在这里,磷酸基团在酶之间进行通道化传递,这可能会使酶控制系数之和增加到二,而三元复合物的形成可能会使酶控制系数之和降至低于一。最近的实验研究证实了这种识别以及总控制的理论预测值。大分子拥挤被证明是调节PTS途径非理想行为和酶控制系数之和的一个主要因素候选者。