Difference between revisions of "Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Car-activation"
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+ | <h1>Car activation</h1> | ||
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+ | <h2 id="Problem">Problem</h2> | ||
<p>Most of the reactions in our pathway consider just the propane-intermediate with other cofactors and the enzyme in their reactions. However, there is one reaction that does not fit in this mold: the activation of CAR.</p> | <p>Most of the reactions in our pathway consider just the propane-intermediate with other cofactors and the enzyme in their reactions. However, there is one reaction that does not fit in this mold: the activation of CAR.</p> | ||
<p>As mentioned before, Car is the enzyme converting butyric acid to butyraldehyde. However, before this enzyme can function in our pathway, we need to activate it using a different enzyme, Sfp. This reaction differs from most in the way the substrate is produced and degraded: Car is produced from DNA with transcription and translation and degraded by protein-degrading enzymes, as opposed to the substrate being created and degraded from enzyme activity only. This gives rise to some questions: What aspects of the cell change the amount of active Car, as well as what is the amount of active Car.</p> | <p>As mentioned before, Car is the enzyme converting butyric acid to butyraldehyde. However, before this enzyme can function in our pathway, we need to activate it using a different enzyme, Sfp. This reaction differs from most in the way the substrate is produced and degraded: Car is produced from DNA with transcription and translation and degraded by protein-degrading enzymes, as opposed to the substrate being created and degraded from enzyme activity only. This gives rise to some questions: What aspects of the cell change the amount of active Car, as well as what is the amount of active Car.</p> | ||
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+ | <h2 id="Model">Model</h2> | ||
<p>The reaction transforming Car from its inactive (called Car_apo) form into its active (called Car_holo) form is as follows:</p> | <p>The reaction transforming Car from its inactive (called Car_apo) form into its active (called Car_holo) form is as follows:</p> | ||
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<p style="color:gray;">--Formulas of the reactions here--</p> | <p style="color:gray;">--Formulas of the reactions here--</p> | ||
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<p>As you can see, we modeled the creation of Car_apo as a constant flux reaction, and the degradation of different proteins as a reaction abiding the laws of mass action. This is because we assume we aren’t affecting the DNA transcription and translation in our model, and since protein degradation is an enzymatic reaction that is hard to model we simplify it as a mass-action reaction.</p> | <p>As you can see, we modeled the creation of Car_apo as a constant flux reaction, and the degradation of different proteins as a reaction abiding the laws of mass action. This is because we assume we aren’t affecting the DNA transcription and translation in our model, and since protein degradation is an enzymatic reaction that is hard to model we simplify it as a mass-action reaction.</p> | ||
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+ | <h2 id="Results">Results</h2> | ||
<p>We tested our model with two scenarios: One where the Car creation and degradation is disabled, and one where those reactions are active. Since we do not know the rates at which protein creation and degradation happen, we tested our model with values between 0 and 5 µM/s.</p> | <p>We tested our model with two scenarios: One where the Car creation and degradation is disabled, and one where those reactions are active. Since we do not know the rates at which protein creation and degradation happen, we tested our model with values between 0 and 5 µM/s.</p> |
Revision as of 13:24, 10 August 2015