19 research outputs found

    Metabolic flux understanding of Pichia pastoris grown on heterogenous culture media

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    [EN] Within the emergent field of Systems Biology, mathematical models obtained from physical chemical laws (the so-called first principles-based models) of microbial systems are employed to discern the principles that govern cellular behaviour and achieve a predictive understanding of cellular functions. The reliance on this biochemical knowledge has the drawback that some of the assumptions (specific kinetics of the reaction system, unknown dynamics and values of the model parameters) may not be valid for all the metabolic possible states of the network. In this uncertainty context, the combined use of fundamental knowledge and data measured in the fermentation that describe the behaviour of the microorganism in the manufacturing process is paramount to overcome this problem. In this paper, a grey modelling approach is presented combining data-driven and first principles information at different scales, developed for Pichia pastoris cultures grown on different carbon sources. This approach will allow us to relate patterns of recombinant protein production to intracellular metabolic states and correlate intra and extracellular reactions in order to understand how the internal state of the cells determines the observed behaviour in P. pastoris cultivations.Research in this study was partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and FEDER funds from the European Union through grants DPI2011-28112-C04-01 and DPI2011-28112-C04-02. The authors are also grateful to Biopolis SL for supporting this research. We also gratefully acknowledge Associate Professor Jose Camacho for providing the Exploratory Data Analysis Toolbox.González Martínez, JM.; Folch-Fortuny, A.; Llaneras Estrada, F.; Tortajada Serra, M.; Picó Marco, JA.; Ferrer, A. (2014). Metabolic flux understanding of Pichia pastoris grown on heterogenous culture media. Chemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems. 134:89-99. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemolab.2014.02.003S899913

    User-friendly guide for using benthic ecological indicators in coastal and marine quality assessment

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    Experience demonstrates that none of the available measures on biological effects of pollution should be considered ideal. The use of a single approach does not seem appropriate due to the complexity inherent in assessing the environmental quality of a system. Rather, this should be evaluated by combining a suite of indices providing complementary information.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VG5-4JYKP6H-1/1/10533cc157a01d6648488c0009cd485
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