Markus Ralser , Sreejith J. Varma , Richard A. Notebaart
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引用次数: 3
Abstract
Metabolism is executed by an efficient, interconnected and ancient biochemical system, the metabolic network. Its evolutionary origins are, however, barely understood. We here discuss that because of niche adaptation, the evolutionary selection acting on the metabolic network structure distinguishes modern species and early life forms. Yet, its basic structure remained conserved over more than three billion years of diverging evolution. We speculate that this situation attributes key roles in metabolic network evolution to (i) the reaction properties of central metabolites, (ii) simple catalysts (e.g. metal ions, amino acids) whose importance remained unchanged during evolution, and (iii) the interconnectivity of the network that limits its expansion. The conservation of network structure hence implies that early life forms already used similar metabolic reaction topologies as modern species.
期刊介绍:
Current Opinion in Systems Biology is a new systematic review journal that aims to provide specialists with a unique and educational platform to keep up-to-date with the expanding volume of information published in the field of Systems Biology. It publishes polished, concise and timely systematic reviews and opinion articles. In addition to describing recent trends, the authors are encouraged to give their subjective opinion on the topics discussed. As this is such a broad discipline, we have determined themed sections each of which is reviewed once a year. The following areas will be covered by Current Opinion in Systems Biology: -Genomics and Epigenomics -Gene Regulation -Metabolic Networks -Cancer and Systemic Diseases -Mathematical Modelling -Big Data Acquisition and Analysis -Systems Pharmacology and Physiology -Synthetic Biology -Stem Cells, Development, and Differentiation -Systems Biology of Mold Organisms -Systems Immunology and Host-Pathogen Interaction -Systems Ecology and Evolution