The necessarily sharp focus of metabolic engineering and metabolic synthetic biology on pathways and their fluxes has tended to divert attention from the damaging enzymatic and chemical side-reactions that pathway metabolites can undergo. Although historically overlooked and underappreciated, such metabolite damage reactions are now known to occur throughout metabolism and to generate (formerly enigmatic) peaks detected in metabolomics datasets. It is also now known that metabolite damage is often countered by dedicated repair enzymes that undo or prevent it. Metabolite damage and repair are highly relevant to engineered pathway design: metabolite damage reactions can reduce flux rates and product yields, and repair enzymes can provide robust, host-independent solutions. Herein, after introducing the core principles of metabolite damage and repair, we use case histories to document how damage and repair processes affect efficient operation of engineered pathways - particularly those that are heterologous, non-natural, or cell-free. We then review how metabolite damage reactions can be predicted, how repair reactions can be prospected, and how metabolite damage and repair can be built into genome-scale metabolic models. Lastly, we propose a versatile 'plug and play' set of well-characterized metabolite repair enzymes to solve metabolite damage problems known or likely to occur in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology projects. Copyright \copyright 2017 International Metabolic Engineering Society. All rights reserved.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Sun2017Metabolite
%A Sun, Jiayi
%A Jeffryes, James G.
%A Henry, Christopher S.
%A Bruner, Steven D.
%A Hanson, Andrew D.
%D 2017
%J Metabolic engineering
%K metabolic-engineering repair
%P 150--159
%T Metabolite damage and repair in metabolic engineering design.
%U http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29030275
%V 44
%X The necessarily sharp focus of metabolic engineering and metabolic synthetic biology on pathways and their fluxes has tended to divert attention from the damaging enzymatic and chemical side-reactions that pathway metabolites can undergo. Although historically overlooked and underappreciated, such metabolite damage reactions are now known to occur throughout metabolism and to generate (formerly enigmatic) peaks detected in metabolomics datasets. It is also now known that metabolite damage is often countered by dedicated repair enzymes that undo or prevent it. Metabolite damage and repair are highly relevant to engineered pathway design: metabolite damage reactions can reduce flux rates and product yields, and repair enzymes can provide robust, host-independent solutions. Herein, after introducing the core principles of metabolite damage and repair, we use case histories to document how damage and repair processes affect efficient operation of engineered pathways - particularly those that are heterologous, non-natural, or cell-free. We then review how metabolite damage reactions can be predicted, how repair reactions can be prospected, and how metabolite damage and repair can be built into genome-scale metabolic models. Lastly, we propose a versatile 'plug and play' set of well-characterized metabolite repair enzymes to solve metabolite damage problems known or likely to occur in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology projects. Copyright \copyright 2017 International Metabolic Engineering Society. All rights reserved.
@article{Sun2017Metabolite,
abstract = {The necessarily sharp focus of metabolic engineering and metabolic synthetic biology on pathways and their fluxes has tended to divert attention from the damaging enzymatic and chemical side-reactions that pathway metabolites can undergo. Although historically overlooked and underappreciated, such metabolite damage reactions are now known to occur throughout metabolism and to generate (formerly enigmatic) peaks detected in metabolomics datasets. It is also now known that metabolite damage is often countered by dedicated repair enzymes that undo or prevent it. Metabolite damage and repair are highly relevant to engineered pathway design: metabolite damage reactions can reduce flux rates and product yields, and repair enzymes can provide robust, host-independent solutions. Herein, after introducing the core principles of metabolite damage and repair, we use case histories to document how damage and repair processes affect efficient operation of engineered pathways - particularly those that are heterologous, non-natural, or cell-free. We then review how metabolite damage reactions can be predicted, how repair reactions can be prospected, and how metabolite damage and repair can be built into genome-scale metabolic models. Lastly, we propose a versatile 'plug and play' set of well-characterized metabolite repair enzymes to solve metabolite damage problems known or likely to occur in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology projects. Copyright {\copyright} 2017 International Metabolic Engineering Society. All rights reserved.},
added-at = {2018-12-02T16:09:07.000+0100},
author = {Sun, Jiayi and Jeffryes, James G. and Henry, Christopher S. and Bruner, Steven D. and Hanson, Andrew D.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/294a15d67e8f388bb78cc2bc47ef86737/karthikraman},
citeulike-article-id = {14510680},
citeulike-linkout-0 = {http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29030275},
citeulike-linkout-1 = {http://www.hubmed.org/display.cgi?uids=29030275},
interhash = {e0a844c6b3c93e8dd9b0267cd54da405},
intrahash = {94a15d67e8f388bb78cc2bc47ef86737},
issn = {1096-7184},
journal = {Metabolic engineering},
keywords = {metabolic-engineering repair},
month = nov,
pages = {150--159},
pmid = {29030275},
posted-at = {2018-01-01 08:20:14},
priority = {2},
timestamp = {2018-12-02T16:09:07.000+0100},
title = {Metabolite damage and repair in metabolic engineering design.},
url = {http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29030275},
volume = 44,
year = 2017
}