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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A community-driven global reconstruction of human metabolism

Ines Thiele, +53 more
- 01 May 2013 - 
- Vol. 31, Iss: 5, pp 419-425
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TLDR
Recon 2, a community-driven, consensus 'metabolic reconstruction', is described, which is the most comprehensive representation of human metabolism that is applicable to computational modeling and has improved topological and functional features.
Abstract
Multiple models of human metabolism have been reconstructed, but each represents only a subset of our knowledge. Here we describe Recon 2, a community-driven, consensus 'metabolic reconstruction', which is the most comprehensive representation of human metabolism that is applicable to computational modeling. Compared with its predecessors, the reconstruction has improved topological and functional features, including ~2× more reactions and ~1.7× more unique metabolites. Using Recon 2 we predicted changes in metabolite biomarkers for 49 inborn errors of metabolism with 77% accuracy when compared to experimental data. Mapping metabolomic data and drug information onto Recon 2 demonstrates its potential for integrating and analyzing diverse data types. Using protein expression data, we automatically generated a compendium of 65 cell type–specific models, providing a basis for manual curation or investigation of cell-specific metabolic properties. Recon 2 will facilitate many future biomedical studies and is freely available at http://humanmetabolism.org/.

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A dynamic metabolic map for diabetes

TL;DR: A large and multiscale whole-body model of organ-specific regulation and metabolism for type 1 diabetes is developed, providing important details on glucose and insulin dynamics.
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Expression-Based Inference of Cancer Metabolic Flux Differences

Wang Y, +1 more
- 09 Jan 2020 - 
TL;DR: FALCON, a computational algorithm for inferring metabolic fluxes from gene expression data, is applied to analyze data from The Cancer Genome Atlas to show how cancer metabolism differs from normal tissues and may be targeted in order to control cancer progression.
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Analytic methods for systems medicine

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A Novel Methodology to Estimate Metabolic Flux Distributions in Constraint-Based Models

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ChEBI for systems biology and metabolic modelling.

TL;DR: ChEBI is a curated database and ontology of biologically relevant small molecules that is widely used as a reference for chemicals in the context of biological data such as protein interactions, pathways, and models.
References
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