Determining Actinobacillus succinogenes metabolic pathways and fluxes by NMR and GC-MS analyses of 13C-labeled metabolic product isotopomers.

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Citation

McKinlay JB, Shachar-Hill Y, Zeikus JG, Vieille C

Determining Actinobacillus succinogenes metabolic pathways and fluxes by NMR and GC-MS analyses of 13C-labeled metabolic product isotopomers.

Metab Eng. 2007 Mar;9(2):177-92. Epub 2006 Nov 17.

PubMed ID
17197218 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Actinobacillus succinogenes is a promising candidate for industrial succinate production. However, in addition to producing succinate, it also produces formate and acetate. To understand carbon flux distribution to succinate and alternative products we fed A. succinogenes [1-(13)C]glucose and analyzed the resulting isotopomers of excreted organic acids, proteinaceous amino acids, and glycogen monomers by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The isotopomer data, together with the glucose consumption and product formation rates and the A. succinogenes biomass composition, were supplied to a metabolic flux model. Oxidative pentose phosphate pathway flux supplied, at most, 20% of the estimated NADPH requirement for cell growth. The model indicated that NADPH was instead produced primarily by the conversion of NADH to NADPH by transhydrogenase and/or by NADP-dependent malic enzyme. Transhydrogenase activity was detected in A. succinogenes cell extracts, as were formate and pyruvate dehydrogenases, which the model suggested were contributing to NADH production. Malic enzyme activity was also detected in cell extracts, consistent with the flux analysis results. Labeling patterns in amino acids and organic acids showed that oxaloacetate and malate were being decarboxylated to pyruvate. These are the first in vivo experiments to show that the partitioning of flux between succinate and alternative fermentation products can occur at multiple nodes in A. succinogenes. The implications for designing effective metabolic engineering strategies to increase A. succinogenes succinate production are discussed.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drug Targets
DrugTargetKindOrganismPharmacological ActionActions
NADHNADP-dependent malic enzymeProteinHumans
Unknown
Not AvailableDetails