Ryan S Senger

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, USA

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Publications (3)6.09 Total impact

  • Article: Deriving Metabolic Engineering Strategies from Genome-Scale Modeling with Flux Ratio Constraints.
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    ABSTRACT: Optimized production of bio-based fuels and chemicals from microbial cell factories is a central goal of systems metabolic engineering. To achieve this goal, a new computational method of using flux balance analysis with flux ratios (FBrAtio) was further developed in this research and applied to five case studies to evaluate and design metabolic engineering strategies. The approach was implemented using publicly available genome-scale metabolic flux models. Synthetic pathways were added to these models along with flux ratio constraints by FBrAtio to achieve increased (i) cellulose production from Arabidopsis; (ii) isobutanol production from yeast; (iii) acetone production from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803; (iv) H2 production from Escherichia coli MG1655; and (v) isopropanol, butanol, and ethanol (IBE) production from engineered Clostridium acetobutylicum. The FBrAtio approach was applied to each case to simulate a metabolic engineering strategy already implemented experimentally, and flux ratios were continually adjusted to find (i) the end-limit of increased production using the existing strategy, (ii) new potential strategies to increase production, and (iii) the impact of these metabolic engineering strategies on product yield and culture growth. The FBrAtio approach has the potential to design "fine-tuned" metabolic engineering strategies in silico that can be implemented directly with available genomic tools.
    Biotechnology Journal 03/2013;
  • Article: Are we ready for genome-scale modeling in plants?
    Eva Collakova, Jiun Y Yen, Ryan S Senger
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    ABSTRACT: As it is becoming easier and faster to generate various types of high-throughput data, one would expect that by now we should have a comprehensive systems-level understanding of biology, biochemistry, and physiology at least in major prokaryotic and eukaryotic model systems. Despite the wealth of available data, we only get a glimpse of what is going on at the molecular level from the global perspective. The major reason is the high level of cellular complexity and our limited ability to identify all (or at least important) components and their interactions in virtually infinite number of internal and external conditions. Metabolism can be modeled mathematically by the use of genome-scale models (GEMs). GEMs are in silico metabolic flux models derived from available genome annotation. These models predict the combination of flux values of a defined metabolic network given the influence of internal and external signals. GEMs have been successfully implemented to model bacterial metabolism for over a decade. However, it was not until 2009 when the first GEM for Arabidopsis thaliana cell-suspension cultures was generated. Genome-scale modeling ("GEMing") in plants brings new challenges primarily due to the missing components and complexity of plant cells represented by the existence of: (i) photosynthesis; (ii) compartmentation; (iii) variety of cell and tissue types; and (iv) diverse metabolic responses to environmental and developmental cues as well as pathogens, insects, and competing weeds. This review presents a critical discussion of the advantages of existing plant GEMs, while identifies key targets for future improvements. Plant GEMs tend to be accurate in predicting qualitative changes in selected aspects of central carbon metabolism, while secondary metabolism is largely neglected mainly due to the missing (unknown) genes and metabolites. As such, these models are suitable for exploring metabolism in plants grown in favorable conditions, but not in field-grown plants that have to cope with environmental changes in complex ecosystems. AraGEM is the first GEM describing a photosynthetic and photorespiring plant cell (Arabidopsis thaliana). We demonstrate the use of AraGEM given the current (limited) knowledge of plant metabolism and reveal the unexpected robustness of AraGEM by a series of in silico simulations. The major focus of these simulations is on the assessment of the: (i) network connectivity; (ii) influence of CO₂ and photon uptake rates on cellular growth rates and production of individual biomass components; and (iii) stability of plant central carbon metabolism with internal pH changes.
    Plant Science 08/2012; 191-192:53-70. · 2.94 Impact Factor
  • Article: Genome-scale modeling using flux ratio constraints to enable metabolic engineering of clostridial metabolism in silico.
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    ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Genome-scale metabolic networks and flux models are an effective platform for linking an organism genotype to its phenotype. However, few modeling approaches offer predictive capabilities to evaluate potential metabolic engineering strategies in silico. METHODS: A new method called "flux balance analysis with flux ratios (FBrAtio)" was developed in this research and applied to a new genome-scale model of Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824 (iCAC794) that contains 707 metabolites and 794 reactions. FBrAtio was used to model wild-type metabolism and metabolically engineered strains of C. acetobutylicum where only flux ratio constraints and thermodynamic reversibility of reactions were required. The FBrAtio approach allows solutions to be found through standard linear programming. RESULTS: Five flux ratio constraints were required to achieve a qualitative picture of wild-type metabolism for C. acetobutylicum for the production of: (i) acetate, (ii) lactate, (iii) butyrate, (iv) acetone, (v) butanol, (vi) ethanol, (vii) CO2 and (viii) H2. Results of this simulation study coincide with published experimental results and show the knockdown of the acetylacetyl-CoA transferase increases butanol to acetone selectivity, while the simultaneous over-expression of the aldehyde/alcohol dehydrogenase greatly increases ethanol production. CONCLUSIONS: FBrAtio is a promising new method for constraining genome-scale models using internal flux ratios. The method was effective for modeling wild-type and engineered strains of C. acetobutylicum.
    BMC Systems Biology 05/2012; 6(1):42. · 3.15 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2012
    • Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
      • Department of Plant Pathology, Physiology, and Weed Science
      Blacksburg, VA, USA