The compositional and evolutionary logic of metabolism
Rogier Braakman, Eric Smith

TL;DR
This paper explores the modular and hierarchical structure of metabolism, revealing how these patterns inform the evolution of metabolic systems and their influence on higher biological organization.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework linking metabolic modularity and hierarchy to evolutionary processes and higher-level biological systems.
Findings
Metabolism exhibits modularity and hierarchy that are conserved across levels.
Cofactors act as control layers and keys within metabolic modules.
Core metabolic modules evolved early with few innovations, shaping long-term evolution.
Abstract
Metabolism displays striking and robust regularities in the forms of modularity and hierarchy, whose composition may be compactly described. This renders metabolic architecture comprehensible as a system, and suggests the order in which layers of that system emerged. Metabolism also serves as the foundation in other hierarchies, at least up to cellular integration including bioenergetics and molecular replication, and trophic ecology. The recapitulation of patterns first seen in metabolism, in these higher levels, suggests metabolism as a source of causation or constraint on many forms of organization in the biosphere. We identify as modules widely reused subsets of chemicals, reactions, or functions, each with a conserved internal structure. At the small molecule substrate level, module boundaries are generally associated with the most complex reaction mechanisms and the most…
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