4.0 Article

Reconstruction of genome-scale metabolic models for 126 human tissues using mCADRE

Journal

BMC SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/1752-0509-6-153

Keywords

Automated metabolic network reconstruction; Brain; Cancer metabolism; Tissue-specific metabolic model; Constraint-based modeling

Funding

  1. Howard Temin Pathway to I Award in Cancer Research [R00 CA126184]
  2. Department of Defense [W81XWH-08-1-0420]
  3. Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust
  4. Luxembourg-Institute for Systems Biology Consortium
  5. Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Program

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Background: Human tissues perform diverse metabolic functions. Mapping out these tissue-specific functions in genome-scale models will advance our understanding of the metabolic basis of various physiological and pathological processes. The global knowledgebase of metabolic functions categorized for the human genome (Human Recon 1) coupled with abundant high-throughput data now makes possible the reconstruction of tissue-specific metabolic models. However, the number of available tissue-specific models remains incomplete compared with the large diversity of human tissues. Results: We developed a method called metabolic Context-specificity Assessed by Deterministic Reaction Evaluation (mCADRE). mCADRE is able to infer a tissue-specific network based on gene expression data and metabolic network topology, along with evaluation of functional capabilities during model building. mCADRE produces models with similar or better functionality and achieves dramatic computational speed up over existing methods. Using our method, we reconstructed draft genome-scale metabolic models for 126 human tissue and cell types. Among these, there are models for 26 tumor tissues along with their normal counterparts, and 30 different brain tissues. We performed pathway-level analyses of this large collection of tissue-specific models and identified the eicosanoid metabolic pathway, especially reactions catalyzing the production of leukotrienes from arachidnoic acid, as potential drug targets that selectively affect tumor tissues. Conclusions: This large collection of 126 genome-scale draft metabolic models provides a useful resource for studying the metabolic basis for a variety of human diseases across many tissues. The functionality of the resulting models and the fast computational speed of the mCADRE algorithm make it a useful tool to build and update tissue-specific metabolic models.

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