vanHeerden2014_Fig4

1

3

Model Manuscripts

Lost in transition: start-up of glycolysis yields subpopulations of nongrowing cells.

  • Johan H van Heerden
  • Meike T Wortel
  • Frank J Bruggeman
  • Joseph J Heijnen
  • Yves J M Bollen
  • Robert Planqué
  • Josephus Hulshof
  • Tom G O'Toole
  • S Aljoscha Wahl
  • Bas Teusink
Science 2014; 343 (6174): 1245114
Abstract
Cells need to adapt to dynamic environments. Yeast that fail to cope with dynamic changes in the abundance of glucose can undergo growth arrest. We show that this failure is caused by imbalanced reactions in glycolysis, the essential pathway in energy metabolism in most organisms. The imbalance arises largely from the fundamental design of glycolysis, making this state of glycolysis a generic risk. Cells with unbalanced glycolysis coexisted with vital cells. Spontaneous, nongenetic metabolic variability among individual cells determines which state is reached and, consequently, which cells survive. Transient ATP (adenosine 5'-triphosphate) hydrolysis through futile cycling reduces the probability of reaching the imbalanced state. Our results reveal dynamic behavior of glycolysis and indicate that cell fate can be determined by heterogeneity purely at the metabolic level.
Id Name JWS model
model1_ vanHeerden2
model2_ vanHeerden2
Id Name Source Number of Data Sources
Id Name Model Simulation Simulation Simulation
task1_model1_ model1_ 0.0 30.0 1000
task2_model2_ model2_ 0.0 30.0 1000

2D Plots

Id Name Number of Curves
Figure4C Figure 4C 3
Figure4D Figure 4D 3

CSV Reports

Id Name Number of Columns