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Design of Large Metabolic Responses. Constraints and Sensitivity Analysis Export

Journal of Theoretical Biology, Vol. 207, No. 2. (21 November 2000), pp. 265-282.

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analysis biology senstivity systems

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Metabolic control analysis (Kacser & Burns (1973). Symp. Soc. Exp. Biol.27, 65-104; Heinrich & Rapoport (1974). Eur. J. Biochem.42, 89-95) has been extensively used to describe the response of metabolic concentrations and fluxes to small (infinitesimal) changes in enzyme concentrations and effectors. Similarly, metabolic control design (Acerenza (1993). J. theor. Biol.165, 63-85) has been proposed to design small metabolic responses. These approaches have the limitation that they were not devised to deal with large (non-infinitesimal) responses. Here we develop a strategy to design large changes in the metabolic variables. The only assumption made is that, for all the parameter values under consideration, the system has a unique stable steady state. The procedure renders the kinetic parameters of the rate equations that when embedded in the metabolic network produce the pattern of large changes in the steady-state variables that we aim to design. Structural and kinetic constraints impose restrictions on the type of responses that could be designed. We show that these conditions can be transformed into the language of mean-sensitivity coefficients and, as a consequence, a sensitivity analysis of large metabolic responses can be performed after the system has been designed. The mean-sensitivity coefficients fulfil conservation and summation relationships that in the limit reduce to the well-known theorems for infinitesimal changes. Finally, it is shown that the same procedure that was used to design metabolic responses and analyse their sensitivity properties can also be used to determine the values of kinetic parameters of the rate laws operating "in situ".


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