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13C-based metabolic flux analysis
Author(s) -
Nicola Zamboni,
SarahMaria Fendt,
Martin Rühl,
Uwe Sauer
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
nature protocols
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.471
H-Index - 245
eISSN - 1754-2189
pISSN - 1750-2799
DOI - 10.1038/nprot.2009.58
Subject(s) - metabolic flux analysis , flux (metallurgy) , amino acid , systems biology , computational biology , biological system , protocol (science) , biochemistry , stable isotope ratio , chemistry , metabolism , biology , computer science , physics , organic chemistry , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , quantum mechanics
Stable isotope, and in particular (13)C-based flux analysis, is the exclusive approach to experimentally quantify the integrated responses of metabolic networks. Here we describe a protocol that is based on growing microbes on (13)C-labeled glucose and subsequent gas chromatography mass spectrometric detection of (13)C-patterns in protein-bound amino acids. Relying on publicly available software packages, we then describe two complementary mathematical approaches to estimate either local ratios of converging fluxes or absolute fluxes through different pathways. As amino acids in cell protein are abundant and stable, this protocol requires a minimum of equipment and analytical expertise. Most other flux methods are variants of the principles presented here. A true alternative is the analytically more demanding dynamic flux analysis that relies on (13)C-pattern in free intracellular metabolites. The presented protocols take 5-10 d, have been used extensively in the past decade and are exemplified here for the central metabolism of Escherichia coli.

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