Article (Périodiques scientifiques)
A detailed genome-wide reconstruction of mouse metabolism based on human Recon 1
Sigurdsson, Martin I.; Jamshidi, Neema; Steingrimsson, Eirikur et al.
2010In BMC Systems Biology, 4, p. 140
Peer reviewed vérifié par ORBi
 

Documents


Texte intégral
2010-Sigurdsson-A detailed genome-wide reconstruction of mouse metabolism based on human Recon 1.pdf
Postprint Éditeur (691.51 kB)
Demander un accès

Tous les documents dans ORBilu sont protégés par une licence d'utilisation.

Envoyer vers



Détails



Mots-clés :
Algorithms; Animals; Cattle; Genome, Human/genetics; Humans; Lipoprotein Lipase/deficiency; Metabolic Networks and Pathways/genetics; Metabolomics/methods; Mice/genetics/metabolism; Models, Biological; Phenotype; Rats; Reproducibility of Results; Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
Résumé :
[en] BACKGROUND: Well-curated and validated network reconstructions are extremely valuable tools in systems biology. Detailed metabolic reconstructions of mammals have recently emerged, including human reconstructions. They raise the question if the various successful applications of microbial reconstructions can be replicated in complex organisms. RESULTS: We mapped the published, detailed reconstruction of human metabolism (Recon 1) to other mammals. By searching for genes homologous to Recon 1 genes within mammalian genomes, we were able to create draft metabolic reconstructions of five mammals, including the mouse. Each draft reconstruction was created in compartmentalized and non-compartmentalized version via two different approaches. Using gap-filling algorithms, we were able to produce all cellular components with three out of four versions of the mouse metabolic reconstruction. We finalized a functional model by iterative testing until it passed a predefined set of 260 validation tests. The reconstruction is the largest, most comprehensive mouse reconstruction to-date, accounting for 1,415 genes coding for 2,212 gene-associated reactions and 1,514 non-gene-associated reactions.We tested the mouse model for phenotype prediction capabilities. The majority of predicted essential genes were also essential in vivo. However, our non-tissue specific model was unable to predict gene essentiality for many of the metabolic genes shown to be essential in vivo. Our knockout simulation of the lipoprotein lipase gene correlated well with experimental results, suggesting that softer phenotypes can also be simulated. CONCLUSIONS: We have created a high-quality mouse genome-scale metabolic reconstruction, iMM1415 (Mus Musculus, 1415 genes). We demonstrate that the mouse model can be used to perform phenotype simulations, similar to models of microbe metabolism. Since the mouse is an important experimental organism, this model should become an essential tool for studying metabolic phenotypes in mice, including outcomes from drug screening.
Disciplines :
Sciences du vivant: Multidisciplinaire, généralités & autres
Auteur, co-auteur :
Sigurdsson, Martin I.
Jamshidi, Neema
Steingrimsson, Eirikur
THIELE, Ines 
Palsson, Bernhard O.
Co-auteurs externes :
yes
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
A detailed genome-wide reconstruction of mouse metabolism based on human Recon 1
Date de publication/diffusion :
2010
Titre du périodique :
BMC Systems Biology
eISSN :
1752-0509
Maison d'édition :
BioMed Central, Royaume-Uni
Volume/Tome :
4
Pagination :
140
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed vérifié par ORBi
Disponible sur ORBilu :
depuis le 30 avril 2014

Statistiques


Nombre de vues
102 (dont 1 Unilu)
Nombre de téléchargements
1 (dont 1 Unilu)

citations Scopus®
 
130
citations Scopus®
sans auto-citations
109
OpenCitations
 
122
citations OpenAlex
 
159
citations WoS
 
122

Bibliographie


Publications similaires



Contacter ORBilu