Journal
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 13, Issue 124, Pages -Publisher
ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2016.0627
Keywords
microbial communities; community flux balance analysis; genome-scale stoichiometric models; metabolic interactions; growth strategies; derivation of flux balance analysis
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Funding
- Zenith ZonMW [40-41009-98-10038]
- EraSysApp SysMilk grant [832.14.001]
- NWO-VIDI [864.11.011]
- NWO-VICI [865.14.005]
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Microbial communities are ubiquitously found in Nature and have direct implications for the environment, human health and biotechnology. The species composition and overall function of microbial communities are largely shaped by metabolic interactions such as competition for resources and cross-feeding. Although considerable scientific progress has been made towards mapping and modelling species-level metabolism, elucidating the metabolic exchanges between microorganisms and steering the community dynamics remain an enormous scientific challenge. In view of the complexity, computational models of microbial communities are essential to obtain systems-level understanding of ecosystem functioning. This review discusses the applications and limitations of constraint-based stoichiometric modelling tools, and in particular flux balance analysis (FBA). We explain this approach from first principles and identify the challenges one faces when extending it to communities, and discuss the approaches used in the field in view of these challenges. We distinguish between steady-state and dynamic FBA approaches extended to communities. We conclude that much progress has been made, but many of the challenges are still open.
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