Metabolic modelling in the development of cell factories by synthetic biology

Paula Jouhten*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview Articlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cell factories are commonly microbial organisms utilized for bioconversion of renewable resources to bulk or high value chemicals. Introduction of novel production pathways in chassis strains is the core of the development of cell factories by synthetic biology. Synthetic biology aims to create novel biological functions and systems not found in nature by combining biology with engineering. The workflow of the development of novel cell factories with synthetic biology is ideally linear which will be attainable with the quantitative engineering approach, high-quality predictive models, and libraries of well-characterized parts. Different types of metabolic models, mathematical representations of metabolism and its components, enzymes and metabolites, are useful in particular phases of the synthetic biology workflow. In this minireview, the role of metabolic modelling in synthetic biology will be discussed with a review of current status of compatible methods and models for the in silico design and quantitative evaluation of a cell factory.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere201210009
JournalComputational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
Volume3
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2012
MoE publication typeA2 Review article, Literature review, Systematic review

Keywords

  • Chassis
  • Constraint-based
  • Flux
  • Kinetics
  • Simulation

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