Channelling can decrease pool size
- 1 February 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 204 (1) , 257-266
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1992.tb16632.x
Abstract
It is widely considered that a possible advantage of metabolite channelling, in which a product of an enzyme is transferred to the next enzyme in a metabolic pathway without being released to the 'bulk' solution, is that channelling can decrease the steady-state concentrations of 'pool' intermediates. This then spares the limited solvent capacity of the cell, and reduces the loss of pathway flux due to leakage or instability of the free intermediate. Recently, however, based on simulations of a particular model of a 'dynamic' channel, Cornish-Bowden ["Failure of channelling to maintain low concentrations of metabolic intermediates" (1991) Eur. J. Biochem. 195, 103-108] has argued that this is not in fact the case; his simulations indicated that the channel was rather ineffective at decreasing the concentration of the pool intermediate, and in some cases actually increased it. However, although his simulations were restricted to very specific thermodynamic and kinetic parameters, he generalised his conclusions, arguing that "channelling has no effect on the free concentration of a channelled intermediate in a pathway". By showing that, for a number of kinetic cases, the concentration of the pool intermediate did decrease substantially with increased channelling, we demonstrate here that the conclusion of Cornish-Bowden is not correct. In particular, if the reaction catalysed by the enzymes forming the channel has an equilibrium constant K higher than 1, and if the enzyme removing the product of the channel reaction is kinetically competent, channelling in the model system studied by Cornish-Bowden (1991) can decrease the steady-state concentration of the pool by a factor of 1000, independently of the mechanism of the terminal reaction and under conditions of essentially constant overall flux. If the channel is a 'static' channel, the decrease in the pool can be to arbitrarily low levels. This conclusion also holds for a system in which other reactions may consume the pool intermediate. Thus, channelling can maintain metabolite concentrations at low levels.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Metabolic control theory: A structural approachPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Mathematical analysis of enzymic reaction systems using optimization principlesEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1991
- Failure of channelling to maintain low concentrations of metabolic intermediatesEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1991
- Enzyme‐enzyme interactions and their metabolic roleFEBS Letters, 1990
- Kinetic and physico-chemical analysis of enzyme complexes and their possible role in the control of metabolismProgress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology, 1989
- Time hierarchy in enzymatic reaction chains resulting from optimality principlesJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1987
- A theoretical approach to the evolution and structural design of enzymatic networks; Linear enzymatic chains, branched pathways and glycolysis of erythrocytesBulletin of Mathematical Biology, 1987
- A minimal hypothesis for membrane-linked free-energy transduction: The role of independent, small coupling unitsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Bioenergetics, 1984
- On the functional proton current pathway of electron transport phosphorylationBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Bioenergetics, 1979
- Metabolic Compartmentation: Symbiotic, Organellar, Multienzymic, and MicroenvironmentalAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1974