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A kinetic rationale for functional redundancy in fatty acid biosynthesis

Sophia Ruppe, Kathryn Mains, Jerome M. Fox

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

and paired that model with a fully reconstituted in vitro system to examine the capabilities afforded by functional redundancy in fatty acid synthesis. The model captures-and helps explain-the effects of experimental perturbations to FAS systems and provides a powerful tool for guiding experimental investigations of fatty acid assembly. Compositional analyses carried out in silico and in vitro indicate that FASs with multiple partially redundant enzymes enable tighter (i.e., more independent and/or broader range) control of distinct biochemical objectives-the total production, unsaturated fraction, and average length of fatty acids-than FASs with only a single multifunctional version of each enzyme (i.e., one enzyme with the catalytic capabilities of two partially redundant enzymes). Maximal production of unsaturated fatty acids, for example, requires a second dehydratase that is not essential for their synthesis. This work provides a kinetic, control-theoretic rationale for the inclusion of partially redundant enzymes in fatty acid pathways and supplies a valuable framework for carrying out detailed studies of FAS kinetics.

Topics & Concepts

BiosynthesisBiochemistryChemistryRedundancy (engineering)Computational biologyBiologyEnzymeComputer scienceOperating systemMicrobial Metabolic Engineering and BioproductionEnzyme Catalysis and ImmobilizationLipid metabolism and biosynthesis
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