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Resolution: standard / high Figure 1.
Metabolic networks. (a) A set of related metabolic reactions can be represented as a network. M1, M2, and
so on are metabolites and E1, E2, and so on are the enzymes that catalyze the conversion
of one metabolite into another. The arrows represent the direction of the reaction.
(b) Different ways of representing a metabolic network: left, with the metabolites as
nodes; right, with the enzymes as nodes. (c) Representation of seed compounds in a hypothetical metabolic network. The metabolic
boundary of the organism is represented by the gray oval. Metabolites (the nodes in
the network) are represented by colored circles. The set of compounds that cannot
be internally synthesized but must be obtained from the environment is referred to
as the seed set, and is represented here as red circles. Seed metabolites form the
interface between the environment and the metabolic system and link the metabolic
habitats of an organism with its core metabolic processes. In this hypothetical network,
it is possible to reach any of the internal nodes (open green nodes) from any other
node except those that have to be obtained from the environment (blue arrows).
Janga and Babu Genome Biology 2008 9:239 doi:10.1186/gb-2008-9-11-239 |