Spatial self-organization of enzymes in complex reaction networks
Vincent Ouazan-Reboul, Ramin Golestanian, Jaime Agudo-Canalejo

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that enzyme chemotaxis can induce spatial self-organization in complex biochemical networks, potentially regulating metabolic activity and signaling in living systems.
Contribution
It develops a general theory for enzyme-driven self-organization in arbitrary reaction networks, highlighting the role of chemotactic mobilities and network structure.
Findings
Self-organization depends on enzyme chemotactic mobilities.
Network structure influences the emergence of spatial patterns.
Self-organization may regulate metabolic activity and signaling.
Abstract
Living systems contain intricate biochemical networks whose structure is closely related to their function and allows them to exhibit robust behavior in the presence of external stimuli. Such networks typically involve catalytic enzymes, which can have non-trivial transport properties, in particular chemotaxis-like directed motion along gradients of substrates and products. Here, we find that taking into account enzyme chemotaxis in models of catalyzed reaction networks can lead to their spatial self-organization in a process similar to biomolecular condensate formation. We develop a general theory for arbitrary reaction networks, and systematically study all closed unimolecular reaction networks involving up to six chemicals. Importantly, we find that network-wide propagation of concentration perturbations can be key to enabling self-organization. The ability to self-organize is highly…
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