Srijith Sasikumar, S Pavan Kumar, Nirav Pravinbhai Bhatt, Himanshu Sinha
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Genome-scale metabolic modelling identifies reactions mediated by SNP-SNP interactions associated with yeast sporulation.
Genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) are powerful tools used to understand the functional effects of genetic variants. However, the impact of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in transcription factors and their interactions on metabolic fluxes remains largely unexplored. Using gene expression data from a yeast allele replacement panel grown during sporulation, we constructed co-expression networks and SNP-specific GEMs. Analysis of co-expression networks revealed that during sporulation, SNP-SNP interactions impact the connectivity of metabolic regulators involved in glycolysis, steroid and histidine biosynthesis, and amino acid metabolism. Further, genome-scale differential flux analysis identified reactions within six major metabolic pathways associated with sporulation efficiency variation. Notably, autophagy was predicted to act as a pentose pathway-dependent compensatory mechanism supplying critical precursors like nucleotides and amino acids, enhancing sporulation. Our study highlights how transcription factor polymorphisms interact to shape metabolic pathways in yeast, offering insights into genetic variants associated with metabolic traits in genome-wide association studies.
期刊介绍:
npj Systems Biology and Applications is an online Open Access journal dedicated to publishing the premier research that takes a systems-oriented approach. The journal aims to provide a forum for the presentation of articles that help define this nascent field, as well as those that apply the advances to wider fields. We encourage studies that integrate, or aid the integration of, data, analyses and insight from molecules to organisms and broader systems. Important areas of interest include not only fundamental biological systems and drug discovery, but also applications to health, medical practice and implementation, big data, biotechnology, food science, human behaviour, broader biological systems and industrial applications of systems biology.
We encourage all approaches, including network biology, application of control theory to biological systems, computational modelling and analysis, comprehensive and/or high-content measurements, theoretical, analytical and computational studies of system-level properties of biological systems and computational/software/data platforms enabling such studies.