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Advances in Dynamics of Vehicles on Roads and Tracks : Proceedings of the 26th Symposium of the International Association of Vehicle System Dynamics, IAVSD 2019, August 12-16, 2019, Gothenburg, Sweden / / edited by Matthijs Klomp, Fredrik Bruzelius, Jens Nielsen, Angela Hillemyr
Advances in Dynamics of Vehicles on Roads and Tracks : Proceedings of the 26th Symposium of the International Association of Vehicle System Dynamics, IAVSD 2019, August 12-16, 2019, Gothenburg, Sweden / / edited by Matthijs Klomp, Fredrik Bruzelius, Jens Nielsen, Angela Hillemyr
Edizione [1st ed. 2020.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2020
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (XXVIII, 1925 p. 1423 illus., 700 illus. in color.)
Disciplina 629.049
Collana Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering
Soggetto topico Automotive engineering
Vibration
Dynamical systems
Dynamics
Mechatronics
Automotive Engineering
Vibration, Dynamical Systems, Control
ISBN 3-030-38077-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Active Suspension -- Condition Monitoring -- Pantograph-catenary Dynamics -- Safety and Derailment Analysis -- Switches and Crossings -- Track Modelling -- Traction & Braking -- Vehicle Design and Components -- Vehicle Modelling -- Wheel and Rail Contact -- Wheel and Rail Damage -- Wheel and Rail Profiles -- Wheel and Rail Wear -- Vibration and Control -- Drining Automation -- Dynamics of Specialized Vehicles -- Handling Dynamics -- Integrated Chassis Control -- Powertrain and Driveline Control -- State Estimation -- Suspension and Ride Analysis -- Tyre Modelling.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910377823603321
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2020
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Metabolic engineering : concepts and applications / / edited by Sang Yup Lee, Jens Nielsen, Gregory Stephanopoulos
Metabolic engineering : concepts and applications / / edited by Sang Yup Lee, Jens Nielsen, Gregory Stephanopoulos
Pubbl/distr/stampa Weinheim, Germany : , : WILEY-VCH, , [2021]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (962 pages)
Disciplina 660.62
Collana Advanced Biotechnology
Soggetto topico Microbial biotechnology
Microbial genetic engineering
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 3-527-82345-X
3-527-82344-1
3-527-82346-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- Part 1 Concepts -- Chapter 1 Metabolic Engineering Perspectives -- 1.1 History and Overview of Metabolic Engineering -- 1.2 Understanding Cellular Metabolism and Physiology -- 1.2.1 Computational Methods in Understanding Metabolism -- 1.2.2 Experimental Methods in Understanding Metabolism -- 1.3 General Approaches to Metabolic Engineering -- 1.3.1 Rational Metabolic Engineering -- 1.3.2 Combinatorial Metabolic Engineering -- 1.3.3 Systems Metabolic Engineering -- 1.4 Host Organism Selection -- 1.5 Substrate Considerations -- 1.6 Metabolic Engineering and Synthetic Biology -- 1.7 The Future of Metabolic Engineering -- References -- Chapter 2 Genome‐Scale Models: Two Decades of Progress and a 2020 Vision -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Flux Balance Analysis -- 2.2.1 Dynamic Mass Balances -- 2.2.2 Analogy to Deriving Enzymatic Rate Equations -- 2.2.3 Formulating Flux Balances at the Genome‐Scale -- 2.2.4 Constrained Optimization -- 2.2.5 Principles -- 2.2.6 Additional Constraints -- 2.2.7 Flux-Concentration Duality -- 2.2.8 Recap -- 2.3 Network Reconstruction -- 2.3.1 Assembling the Reactome -- 2.3.2 Basic Principles of Network Reconstruction -- 2.3.3 Curation -- 2.3.4 GEMs Have a Genomic Basis -- 2.3.5 Computational Queries -- 2.3.6 Scope Expansion -- 2.3.7 Knowledge Bases -- 2.3.8 Availability of GEMs -- 2.3.9 Recap -- 2.4 Brief History of the GEM for E. coli -- 2.4.1 Origin -- 2.4.2 Model Organism -- 2.4.3 Key Predictions -- 2.4.4 Design Algorithms -- 2.4.5 Scope Expansions -- 2.4.6 Recap -- 2.5 From Metabolism to the Proteome -- 2.5.1 ME Models -- 2.5.2 Capabilities of ME Models -- 2.5.2.1 Growth‐Coupled Metabolic Designs Can Be Reproduced in GEMs -- 2.5.2.2 ME Models Can Reflect Properties of the Metalloproteome -- 2.5.2.3 ME Models Can Compute the Biomass Objective Function.
2.5.2.4 Computing Stresses -- 2.5.3 Recapitulation -- 2.6 Current Developments -- 2.6.1 Kinetics -- 2.6.2 Transcriptional Regulation -- 2.6.2.1 iModulons -- 2.6.2.2 Activities -- 2.6.3 Protein Structures -- 2.7 Broader Perspectives -- 2.7.1 Distal Causation -- 2.7.2 Contextualization of GEMs Within Workflows -- 2.8 What Does the Future Look Like for GEMs? -- Disclaimer -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Chapter 3 Quantitative Metabolic Flux Analysis Based on Isotope Labeling -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 What Metabolic Flux Analysis Is About -- 3.1.2 The Variants of 13C‐MFA -- 3.2 A Toy Example Illustrates the Basic Principles -- 3.2.1 Fluxomics: More Than Just a Branch of Metabolomics -- 3.2.2 Isotope Labeling: The Key to Metabolic Fluxes -- 3.2.3 From the Data to the Intracellular Fluxes -- 3.2.4 INST‐13C‐MFA: Metabolic Stationary, but Isotopically Nonstationary -- 3.2.5 From Measurements to Flux Estimates: Parameter Fitting -- 3.2.6 Flux Estimates Have Confidence Bounds: Statistical Analysis -- 3.2.7 The Classical Approach at Metabolic and Isotopic Stationary State -- 3.2.8 An Additional Source of Information: Carbon Atom Transitions -- 3.2.9 Input Labeling Design: How Informative Can an Experiment Be Made? -- 3.2.10 The Isotopomers of a Single Metabolite can be a Rich Source of Information -- 3.2.11 Bidirectional Reaction Steps: More Than Just Nuisance Factors -- 3.2.12 Isotopomer Fractions Cannot Be Measured Comprehensively -- 3.3 Lessons Learned from the Example -- 3.3.1 Definition of 13C‐MFA Revisited -- 3.3.2 Statistical Evaluation and Optimal Experimental Design -- 3.4 How to Configure an Isotope Labeling Experiment -- 3.4.1 Modeling and Simulation of Isotope Labeling Experiments -- 3.4.2 Metabolic Network Specification -- 3.4.3 Atom Transition Network Specification -- 3.4.4 Input Labeling Composition -- 3.4.5 Measurement Specification.
3.4.6 Flux Constraints -- 3.4.7 In Silico Experimental ILE Design -- 3.5 Putting Theory into Practice -- 3.5.1 A Recipe How to Start -- 3.5.2 Metabolic and Isotopic Stationarity -- 3.5.3 Measuring Extracellular Fluxes -- 3.5.4 Administering Labeled Substrate(s) -- 3.5.5 Metabolomics: Sampling, Sample Preparation, and Analytical Procedures -- 3.5.6 Adjusting Labeling Enrichments for Isotopic Steady State Approximation -- 3.5.7 Correcting Labeling Enrichments for Natural Isotope Abundance -- 3.5.8 Simulation of Labeling Data and Flux Estimation -- 3.5.9 Delicacies of INST‐13C‐MFA -- 3.6 Future Challenges of 13C‐MFA -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 4 Proteome Constraints in Genome‐Scale Models -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Cellular Constraints -- 4.3 Formulation of Proteome Constraints -- 4.3.1 Coarse‐Grained Integration of Proteome Constraints -- 4.3.2 Fine‐Tuned Integration of Proteome Constraints -- 4.4 Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 5 Kinetic Models of Metabolism -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Definition of Enzyme Kinetics -- 5.2.1 Michaelis-Menten Formula -- 5.3 Factors Affecting Intracellular Enzyme Kinetics -- 5.4 Kinetic Model: Definition and Scope -- 5.4.1 What Is a Kinetic Model? -- 5.4.2 Scope of Kinetic Models -- 5.4.3 How to Build a Functional Kinetic Model? -- 5.5 Main Mathematical Expressions in Description of Reaction Rates -- 5.5.1 Mechanistic Rate Expressions -- 5.6 Approximative Rate Expressions -- 5.7 Approaches to Assign Parameters in the Rate Expressions -- 5.7.1 Direct Measurements of Kinetic Parameters in Enzyme Assays -- 5.7.2 Querying Databases -- 5.7.3 Inferring from Measured Fluxes -- 5.7.4 Parameters Inference Using the Statistical Analysis -- 5.8 Applications -- 5.9 Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 6 Metabolic Control Analysis.
6.1 The Metabolic Engineering Context of Metabolic Control Analysis -- 6.2 MCA Theory -- 6.2.1 Metabolic Steady State -- 6.2.2 Flux Control Coefficients -- 6.2.3 Examples of the Flux-Enzyme Relationship -- 6.2.4 Flux Summation Theorem -- 6.2.5 Concentration Control Coefficients -- 6.2.6 Linking Control Coefficients to Enzyme Properties -- 6.2.6.1 Enzyme Rate Equations and Elasticity Coefficients -- 6.2.6.2 Elasticities and Control Coefficients -- 6.2.6.3 Block Coefficients and Top‐Down Analysis -- 6.2.7 Feedback Inhibition -- 6.2.8 Large Alterations of Enzyme Activity -- 6.3 Implications of MCA for Metabolic Engineering Strategies -- 6.3.1 Abolishing Feedback Inhibition -- 6.3.2 Increasing Demand for Product -- 6.3.3 Inhibition of Competing Pathways -- 6.3.4 Designing Large Changes in Metabolic Flux -- 6.3.4.1 Yeast Tryptophan Synthesis -- 6.3.4.2 The Universal Method -- 6.3.4.3 Bacterial Production of Aromatic Amino Acids -- 6.3.4.4 Penicillin and Other Instances -- 6.3.5 Impacts on Yield from a Growing System -- 6.4 Conclusion -- Appendix 6.A: Feedback Inhibition Simulation -- References -- Chapter 7 Thermodynamics of Metabolic Pathways -- 7.1 Bioenergetics in Life and in Metabolic Engineering -- 7.2 Thermodynamics‐Based Flux Analysis Workflow -- 7.2.1 Thermodynamic Model Curation -- 7.2.1.1 Estimation of the Standard Free Energies of Formation -- 7.2.1.2 Compensating for Compartment‐Specific Ionic Strength and pH -- 7.2.1.3 Compensating the Free Energy of Formation for Isomer Distributions -- 7.2.1.4 Computing the Transformed Free Energies of Reaction -- 7.2.2 Mathematical Formulation -- 7.3 Thermodynamics‐Based Flux Analysis Applications -- 7.3.1 Constraining the Flux Space with Metabolomics Data -- 7.3.2 Characterizing the Feasible Concentration Space -- 7.4 Conclusion and Future Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 8 Pathway Design.
Definition -- 8.1 De Novo Design of Metabolic Pathways -- 8.1.1 Manual Versus Computational Design -- 8.2 Pathway Design Workflow -- 8.2.1 Biochemical Search Space -- 8.2.1.1 Reaction Prediction -- 8.2.1.2 Retrobiosynthesis -- 8.2.1.3 Network Data Representation -- 8.2.2 Pathway Search -- 8.2.2.1 Stoichiometric Matrix‐Based Search -- 8.2.2.2 Graph‐Based Search -- 8.2.2.3 Pathway Ranking -- 8.2.3 Enzyme Assignment -- 8.2.3.1 Enzyme Prediction for Orphan and Novel Reactions -- 8.2.3.2 Choice of Protein Sequence -- 8.2.4 Pathway Feasibility -- 8.2.4.1 Chassis Metabolic Model -- 8.2.4.2 Stoichiometric Feasibility -- 8.2.4.3 Thermodynamic Feasibility -- 8.2.4.4 Kinetic Feasibility -- 8.2.4.5 Toxicity of Intermediates -- 8.3 Applications -- 8.3.1 Available Tools for Pathway Design -- 8.3.2 Successful Applications of Pathway Design Tools -- 8.3.3 Practical Example of Pathway Design -- 8.3.3.1 Creating a Biochemical Network Around BDO -- 8.3.3.2 Search for Biosynthetic Pathways -- 8.3.3.3 Finding Enzymes for Novel Reactions -- 8.3.3.4 Stoichiometric and Thermodynamic Pathway Evaluation -- 8.3.3.5 Overall Ranking of Pathways -- 8.4 Conclusions and Future Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 9 Metabolomics -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Fundamentals -- 9.2.1 Experimental Design -- 9.2.2 Targeted and Untargeted Metabolomics -- 9.2.3 Sequences and Standards -- 9.3 Analytical Techniques -- 9.3.1 Sample Preparation -- 9.3.2 Separation Techniques -- 9.3.2.1 Liquid Chromatography -- 9.3.2.2 Gas Chromatography -- 9.3.2.3 Alternative Separation Techniques -- 9.3.3 Mass Spectrometry -- 9.3.3.1 Ionization Techniques -- 9.3.3.2 Low‐Resolution MS -- 9.3.3.3 High‐Resolution MS -- 9.3.3.4 Acquisition Modes for Targeted MS -- 9.3.3.5 Acquisition Modes for Untargeted Metabolomics -- 9.4 Data Analysis -- 9.4.1 Data Processing in Untargeted Metabolomics.
9.4.1.1 Preprocessing of Individual MS Runs.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910554813403321
Weinheim, Germany : , : WILEY-VCH, , [2021]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Metabolic engineering : concepts and applications / / edited by Sang Yup Lee, Jens Nielsen, Gregory Stephanopoulos
Metabolic engineering : concepts and applications / / edited by Sang Yup Lee, Jens Nielsen, Gregory Stephanopoulos
Pubbl/distr/stampa Weinheim, Germany : , : WILEY-VCH, , [2021]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (962 pages)
Disciplina 660.62
Collana Advanced Biotechnology
Soggetto topico Microbial biotechnology
Microbial genetic engineering
ISBN 3-527-82345-X
3-527-82344-1
3-527-82346-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- Part 1 Concepts -- Chapter 1 Metabolic Engineering Perspectives -- 1.1 History and Overview of Metabolic Engineering -- 1.2 Understanding Cellular Metabolism and Physiology -- 1.2.1 Computational Methods in Understanding Metabolism -- 1.2.2 Experimental Methods in Understanding Metabolism -- 1.3 General Approaches to Metabolic Engineering -- 1.3.1 Rational Metabolic Engineering -- 1.3.2 Combinatorial Metabolic Engineering -- 1.3.3 Systems Metabolic Engineering -- 1.4 Host Organism Selection -- 1.5 Substrate Considerations -- 1.6 Metabolic Engineering and Synthetic Biology -- 1.7 The Future of Metabolic Engineering -- References -- Chapter 2 Genome‐Scale Models: Two Decades of Progress and a 2020 Vision -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Flux Balance Analysis -- 2.2.1 Dynamic Mass Balances -- 2.2.2 Analogy to Deriving Enzymatic Rate Equations -- 2.2.3 Formulating Flux Balances at the Genome‐Scale -- 2.2.4 Constrained Optimization -- 2.2.5 Principles -- 2.2.6 Additional Constraints -- 2.2.7 Flux-Concentration Duality -- 2.2.8 Recap -- 2.3 Network Reconstruction -- 2.3.1 Assembling the Reactome -- 2.3.2 Basic Principles of Network Reconstruction -- 2.3.3 Curation -- 2.3.4 GEMs Have a Genomic Basis -- 2.3.5 Computational Queries -- 2.3.6 Scope Expansion -- 2.3.7 Knowledge Bases -- 2.3.8 Availability of GEMs -- 2.3.9 Recap -- 2.4 Brief History of the GEM for E. coli -- 2.4.1 Origin -- 2.4.2 Model Organism -- 2.4.3 Key Predictions -- 2.4.4 Design Algorithms -- 2.4.5 Scope Expansions -- 2.4.6 Recap -- 2.5 From Metabolism to the Proteome -- 2.5.1 ME Models -- 2.5.2 Capabilities of ME Models -- 2.5.2.1 Growth‐Coupled Metabolic Designs Can Be Reproduced in GEMs -- 2.5.2.2 ME Models Can Reflect Properties of the Metalloproteome -- 2.5.2.3 ME Models Can Compute the Biomass Objective Function.
2.5.2.4 Computing Stresses -- 2.5.3 Recapitulation -- 2.6 Current Developments -- 2.6.1 Kinetics -- 2.6.2 Transcriptional Regulation -- 2.6.2.1 iModulons -- 2.6.2.2 Activities -- 2.6.3 Protein Structures -- 2.7 Broader Perspectives -- 2.7.1 Distal Causation -- 2.7.2 Contextualization of GEMs Within Workflows -- 2.8 What Does the Future Look Like for GEMs? -- Disclaimer -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Chapter 3 Quantitative Metabolic Flux Analysis Based on Isotope Labeling -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 What Metabolic Flux Analysis Is About -- 3.1.2 The Variants of 13C‐MFA -- 3.2 A Toy Example Illustrates the Basic Principles -- 3.2.1 Fluxomics: More Than Just a Branch of Metabolomics -- 3.2.2 Isotope Labeling: The Key to Metabolic Fluxes -- 3.2.3 From the Data to the Intracellular Fluxes -- 3.2.4 INST‐13C‐MFA: Metabolic Stationary, but Isotopically Nonstationary -- 3.2.5 From Measurements to Flux Estimates: Parameter Fitting -- 3.2.6 Flux Estimates Have Confidence Bounds: Statistical Analysis -- 3.2.7 The Classical Approach at Metabolic and Isotopic Stationary State -- 3.2.8 An Additional Source of Information: Carbon Atom Transitions -- 3.2.9 Input Labeling Design: How Informative Can an Experiment Be Made? -- 3.2.10 The Isotopomers of a Single Metabolite can be a Rich Source of Information -- 3.2.11 Bidirectional Reaction Steps: More Than Just Nuisance Factors -- 3.2.12 Isotopomer Fractions Cannot Be Measured Comprehensively -- 3.3 Lessons Learned from the Example -- 3.3.1 Definition of 13C‐MFA Revisited -- 3.3.2 Statistical Evaluation and Optimal Experimental Design -- 3.4 How to Configure an Isotope Labeling Experiment -- 3.4.1 Modeling and Simulation of Isotope Labeling Experiments -- 3.4.2 Metabolic Network Specification -- 3.4.3 Atom Transition Network Specification -- 3.4.4 Input Labeling Composition -- 3.4.5 Measurement Specification.
3.4.6 Flux Constraints -- 3.4.7 In Silico Experimental ILE Design -- 3.5 Putting Theory into Practice -- 3.5.1 A Recipe How to Start -- 3.5.2 Metabolic and Isotopic Stationarity -- 3.5.3 Measuring Extracellular Fluxes -- 3.5.4 Administering Labeled Substrate(s) -- 3.5.5 Metabolomics: Sampling, Sample Preparation, and Analytical Procedures -- 3.5.6 Adjusting Labeling Enrichments for Isotopic Steady State Approximation -- 3.5.7 Correcting Labeling Enrichments for Natural Isotope Abundance -- 3.5.8 Simulation of Labeling Data and Flux Estimation -- 3.5.9 Delicacies of INST‐13C‐MFA -- 3.6 Future Challenges of 13C‐MFA -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 4 Proteome Constraints in Genome‐Scale Models -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Cellular Constraints -- 4.3 Formulation of Proteome Constraints -- 4.3.1 Coarse‐Grained Integration of Proteome Constraints -- 4.3.2 Fine‐Tuned Integration of Proteome Constraints -- 4.4 Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 5 Kinetic Models of Metabolism -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Definition of Enzyme Kinetics -- 5.2.1 Michaelis-Menten Formula -- 5.3 Factors Affecting Intracellular Enzyme Kinetics -- 5.4 Kinetic Model: Definition and Scope -- 5.4.1 What Is a Kinetic Model? -- 5.4.2 Scope of Kinetic Models -- 5.4.3 How to Build a Functional Kinetic Model? -- 5.5 Main Mathematical Expressions in Description of Reaction Rates -- 5.5.1 Mechanistic Rate Expressions -- 5.6 Approximative Rate Expressions -- 5.7 Approaches to Assign Parameters in the Rate Expressions -- 5.7.1 Direct Measurements of Kinetic Parameters in Enzyme Assays -- 5.7.2 Querying Databases -- 5.7.3 Inferring from Measured Fluxes -- 5.7.4 Parameters Inference Using the Statistical Analysis -- 5.8 Applications -- 5.9 Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 6 Metabolic Control Analysis.
6.1 The Metabolic Engineering Context of Metabolic Control Analysis -- 6.2 MCA Theory -- 6.2.1 Metabolic Steady State -- 6.2.2 Flux Control Coefficients -- 6.2.3 Examples of the Flux-Enzyme Relationship -- 6.2.4 Flux Summation Theorem -- 6.2.5 Concentration Control Coefficients -- 6.2.6 Linking Control Coefficients to Enzyme Properties -- 6.2.6.1 Enzyme Rate Equations and Elasticity Coefficients -- 6.2.6.2 Elasticities and Control Coefficients -- 6.2.6.3 Block Coefficients and Top‐Down Analysis -- 6.2.7 Feedback Inhibition -- 6.2.8 Large Alterations of Enzyme Activity -- 6.3 Implications of MCA for Metabolic Engineering Strategies -- 6.3.1 Abolishing Feedback Inhibition -- 6.3.2 Increasing Demand for Product -- 6.3.3 Inhibition of Competing Pathways -- 6.3.4 Designing Large Changes in Metabolic Flux -- 6.3.4.1 Yeast Tryptophan Synthesis -- 6.3.4.2 The Universal Method -- 6.3.4.3 Bacterial Production of Aromatic Amino Acids -- 6.3.4.4 Penicillin and Other Instances -- 6.3.5 Impacts on Yield from a Growing System -- 6.4 Conclusion -- Appendix 6.A: Feedback Inhibition Simulation -- References -- Chapter 7 Thermodynamics of Metabolic Pathways -- 7.1 Bioenergetics in Life and in Metabolic Engineering -- 7.2 Thermodynamics‐Based Flux Analysis Workflow -- 7.2.1 Thermodynamic Model Curation -- 7.2.1.1 Estimation of the Standard Free Energies of Formation -- 7.2.1.2 Compensating for Compartment‐Specific Ionic Strength and pH -- 7.2.1.3 Compensating the Free Energy of Formation for Isomer Distributions -- 7.2.1.4 Computing the Transformed Free Energies of Reaction -- 7.2.2 Mathematical Formulation -- 7.3 Thermodynamics‐Based Flux Analysis Applications -- 7.3.1 Constraining the Flux Space with Metabolomics Data -- 7.3.2 Characterizing the Feasible Concentration Space -- 7.4 Conclusion and Future Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 8 Pathway Design.
Definition -- 8.1 De Novo Design of Metabolic Pathways -- 8.1.1 Manual Versus Computational Design -- 8.2 Pathway Design Workflow -- 8.2.1 Biochemical Search Space -- 8.2.1.1 Reaction Prediction -- 8.2.1.2 Retrobiosynthesis -- 8.2.1.3 Network Data Representation -- 8.2.2 Pathway Search -- 8.2.2.1 Stoichiometric Matrix‐Based Search -- 8.2.2.2 Graph‐Based Search -- 8.2.2.3 Pathway Ranking -- 8.2.3 Enzyme Assignment -- 8.2.3.1 Enzyme Prediction for Orphan and Novel Reactions -- 8.2.3.2 Choice of Protein Sequence -- 8.2.4 Pathway Feasibility -- 8.2.4.1 Chassis Metabolic Model -- 8.2.4.2 Stoichiometric Feasibility -- 8.2.4.3 Thermodynamic Feasibility -- 8.2.4.4 Kinetic Feasibility -- 8.2.4.5 Toxicity of Intermediates -- 8.3 Applications -- 8.3.1 Available Tools for Pathway Design -- 8.3.2 Successful Applications of Pathway Design Tools -- 8.3.3 Practical Example of Pathway Design -- 8.3.3.1 Creating a Biochemical Network Around BDO -- 8.3.3.2 Search for Biosynthetic Pathways -- 8.3.3.3 Finding Enzymes for Novel Reactions -- 8.3.3.4 Stoichiometric and Thermodynamic Pathway Evaluation -- 8.3.3.5 Overall Ranking of Pathways -- 8.4 Conclusions and Future Perspectives -- References -- Chapter 9 Metabolomics -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Fundamentals -- 9.2.1 Experimental Design -- 9.2.2 Targeted and Untargeted Metabolomics -- 9.2.3 Sequences and Standards -- 9.3 Analytical Techniques -- 9.3.1 Sample Preparation -- 9.3.2 Separation Techniques -- 9.3.2.1 Liquid Chromatography -- 9.3.2.2 Gas Chromatography -- 9.3.2.3 Alternative Separation Techniques -- 9.3.3 Mass Spectrometry -- 9.3.3.1 Ionization Techniques -- 9.3.3.2 Low‐Resolution MS -- 9.3.3.3 High‐Resolution MS -- 9.3.3.4 Acquisition Modes for Targeted MS -- 9.3.3.5 Acquisition Modes for Untargeted Metabolomics -- 9.4 Data Analysis -- 9.4.1 Data Processing in Untargeted Metabolomics.
9.4.1.1 Preprocessing of Individual MS Runs.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910829921803321
Weinheim, Germany : , : WILEY-VCH, , [2021]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Systems biology / / edited by Jens Nielsen and Stefan Hohmann
Systems biology / / edited by Jens Nielsen and Stefan Hohmann
Pubbl/distr/stampa Weinheim, Germany : , : Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, , 2017
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (512 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 570.285
Soggetto topico Systems biology
Bioinformatics
ISBN 3-527-69617-2
3-527-69613-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910270911803321
Weinheim, Germany : , : Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, , 2017
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Systems biology / / edited by Jens Nielsen and Stefan Hohmann
Systems biology / / edited by Jens Nielsen and Stefan Hohmann
Pubbl/distr/stampa Weinheim, Germany : , : Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, , 2017
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (512 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 570.285
Soggetto topico Systems biology
Bioinformatics
ISBN 3-527-69617-2
3-527-69613-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910822859003321
Weinheim, Germany : , : Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, , 2017
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui