Abstract

Quantitative analysis of experimental metabolic data is frequently challenged by non-intuitive, complex patterns which emerge from regulatory networks. The complex output of metabolic regulation can be summarised by metabolic functions which comprise information about dynamics of metabolite concentrations. In a system of ordinary differential equations, metabolic functions reflect the sum of biochemical reactions which affect a metabolite concentration, and their integration over time reveals metabolite concentrations. Further, derivatives of metabolic functions provide essential information about system dynamics and elasticities. Here, invertase-driven sucrose hydrolysis was simulated in kinetic models on a cellular and subcellular level. Both Jacobian and Hessian matrices of metabolic functions were derived for quantitative analysis of kinetic regulation of sucrose metabolism. Model simulations suggest that transport of sucrose into the vacuole represents a central regulatory element in plant metabolism during cold acclimation which preserves control of metabolic functions and limits feedback-inhibition of cytosolic invertases by elevated hexose concentrations.

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