4.8 Article

Bayesian genome scale modelling identifies thermal determinants of yeast metabolism

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20338-2

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  1. Chalmers University of Technology

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This study develops a Bayesian genome scale modeling approach to identify thermal determinants of yeast metabolism and design thermotolerant strains by altering key enzymes.
The molecular basis of how temperature affects cell metabolism has been a long-standing question in biology, where the main obstacles are the lack of high-quality data and methods to associate temperature effects on the function of individual proteins as well as to combine them at a systems level. Here we develop and apply a Bayesian modeling approach to resolve the temperature effects in genome scale metabolic models (GEM). The approach minimizes uncertainties in enzymatic thermal parameters and greatly improves the predictive strength of the GEMs. The resulting temperature constrained yeast GEM uncovers enzymes that limit growth at superoptimal temperatures, and squalene epoxidase (ERG1) is predicted to be the most rate limiting. By replacing this single key enzyme with an ortholog from a thermotolerant yeast strain, we obtain a thermotolerant strain that outgrows the wild type, demonstrating the critical role of sterol metabolism in yeast thermosensitivity. Therefore, apart from identifying thermal determinants of cell metabolism and enabling the design of thermotolerant strains, our Bayesian GEM approach facilitates modelling of complex biological systems in the absence of high-quality data and therefore shows promise for becoming a standard tool for genome scale modeling. While temperature impacts the function of all cellular components, it's hard to rule out how the temperature dependence of cell phenotypes emerged from the dependence of individual components. Here, the authors develop a Bayesian genome scale modelling approach to identify thermal determinants of yeast metabolism.

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