Title of article
Thermodynamics of stoichiometric biochemical networks in living systems far from equilibrium Review Article
Author/Authors
Hong Qian، نويسنده , , Daniel A. Beard and Tamar Schlick، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
8
From page
213
To page
220
Abstract
The principles of thermodynamics apply to both equilibrium and nonequilibrium biochemical systems. The mathematical machinery of the classic thermodynamics, however, mainly applies to systems in equilibrium. We introduce a thermodynamic formalism for the study of metabolic biochemical reaction (open, nonlinear) networks in both time-dependent and time-independent nonequilibrium states. Classical concepts in equilibrium thermodynamics–enthalpy, entropy, and Gibbs free energy of biochemical reaction systems–are generalized to nonequilibrium settings. Chemical motive force, heat dissipation rate, and entropy production (creation) rate, key concepts in nonequilibrium systems, are introduced. Dynamic equations for the thermodynamic quantities are presented in terms of the key observables of a biochemical network: stoichiometric matrix Q, reaction fluxes J, and chemical potentials of species μ without evoking empirical rate laws. Energy conservation and the Second Law are established for steady-state and dynamic biochemical networks. The theory provides the physiochemical basis for analyzing large-scale metabolic networks in living organisms.
Keywords
Biological networks , Metabolism , Systems biology , Mathematical modeling , Cycle kinetics
Journal title
Biophysical Chemistry
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Biophysical Chemistry
Record number
1113625
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