Abstract
Abstract Motivation Mitochondria perform several essential functions in order to maintain cellular homeostasis and mitochondrial metabolism is inherently flexible to allow correct function in a wide range of tissues. Dysregulated mitochondrial metabolism can therefore affect different tissues in different ways which presents experimental challenges in understanding the pathology of mitochondrial diseases. System-level metabolic modelling is therefore useful in gaining in-depth insights into tissue-specific mitochondrial metabolism, yet despite the mouse being a common model organism used in research, there is currently no mouse specific mitochondrial metabolic model available. Results In this work, building upon the similarity between human and mouse mitochondrial metabolism, we have created mitoMammal, a genome-scale metabolic model that contains human and mouse specific gene-product reaction rules. MitoMammal is therefore able to model mouse and human mitochondrial metabolism. To demonstrate this feature, using an adapted E-Flux algorithm, we first integrated proteomic data extracted from mitochondria of isolated mouse cardiomyocytes and mouse brown adipocyte tissue. We then integrated transcriptomic data from in vitro differentiated human brown adipose cells and modelled the context specific metabolism using flux balance analysis. In all three simulations, mitoMammal made mostly accurate, and some novel predictions relating to energy metabolism in the context of cardiomyocytes and brown adipocytes. This demonstrates its usefulness in research relating to cardiac disease and diabetes in both mouse and human contexts. Availability and implementation MitoMammal is formatted in SBML3. The code required for constraint-based modelling used in this work is implemented in Python 3 and is available as a Jupyter Notebook. The mitoMammal metabolic model, along with Jupyter notebooks and data used in this work are available at: https://gitlab.com/habermann_lab/mitomammal. Supplementary Information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics Advances online.
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