4.7 Article

Modeling energy depletion in rat livers using Nash equilibrium metabolic pathway analysis

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-06966-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EEC 1941543]
  2. US National Institutes of Health [R01DK096075, R01DK114506]
  3. Shriners Hospitals for Children

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In this article, a Nash Equilibrium approach is used to model and simulate the static cold storage and warm ischemia of a proposed model of liver cells. The results show that the Nash Equilibrium approach provides a good match to experimental data for energy depletion and that the uncertainty in model parameters is very small.
The current gold standard of Static Cold Storage (SCS), which is static cold storage on ice (about + 4 degrees C) in a specialized media such as the University of Wisconsin solution (UW), limits storage to few hours for vascular and metabolically active tissues such as the liver and the heart. The liver is arguably the pinnacle of metabolism in human body and therefore metabolic pathway analysis immediately becomes very relevant. In this article, a Nash Equilibrium (NE) approach, which is a first principles approach, is used to model and simulate the static cold storage and warm ischemia of a proposed model of liver cells. Simulations of energy depletion in the liver in static cold storage measured by ATP content and energy charge are presented along with comparisons to experimental data. In addition, conversion of Nash Equilibrium iterations to time are described along with an uncertainty analysis for the parameters in the model. Results in this work show that the Nash Equilibrium approach provides a good match to experimental data for energy depletion and that the uncertainty in model parameters is very small with percent variances less than 0.1%.

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