Constraints and missing reactions in the urea cycle.

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RESUMO

The stoichiometric relations in a series of biochemical reactions are summarized by a stoichiometric number matrix (with a column for each reaction) and a conservation matrix (with a row for each constraint). These two matrices for a series or cycle of biochemical reactions are related because the columns of the stoichiometric number matrix are in the null space of the conservation matrix, and the rows of the transpose of the conservation matrix are in the null space of the transpose of the stoichiometric number matrix. The conservation matrix for a system of biochemical reactions is of interest because it shows the nature of the constraints in addition to the conservation of atoms and groups. Constraints beyond those for the conservation of atoms and groups indicate "missing reactions" that do not occur because the enzymes involved couple reactions that could occur and still conserve atoms and groups. The interpretation of conservation matrices and stoichiometric matrices for a reaction system is complicated by the fact that they are not unique. However, their row-reduced forms are unique, as are their dimensions, which represent the number of reactants and number of independent reactions. Two matrices that look different contain the same information if they have the same row-reduced form. The urea cycle, which involves five enzyme-catalyzed reactions, and its net reaction are discussed in terms of the linear constraints produced by enzyme catalysis. A procedure to obtain a set of conservation equations that will yield the correct net reaction is described.

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