Maximizing output and recognizing autocatalysis in chemical reaction networks is NP-complete

Jakob Lykke Andersen, Christoph Flamm, Daniel Merkle, Peter F. Stadler

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Background
A classical problem in metabolic design is to maximize the production of a desired compound in a given chemical reaction network by appropriately directing the mass flow through the network. Computationally, this problem is addressed as a linear optimization problem over the flux cone. The prior construction of the flux cone is computationally expensive and no polynomial-time algorithms are known.

Results
Here we show that the output maximization problem in chemical reaction networks is NP-complete. This statement remains true even if all reactions are monomolecular or bi-molecular and if only a single molecular species is used as influx. As a corollary we show, furthermore, that the detection of autocatalytic species, i.e., types that can only be produced from the influx material when they are present in the initial reaction mixture, is an NP-complete computational problem.

Conclusions
Hardness results on combinatorial problems and optimization problems are important to guide the development of computational tools for the analysis of metabolic networks in particular and chemical reaction networks in general. Our results indicate that efficient heuristics and approximate algorithms need to be employed for the analysis of large chemical networks since even conceptually simple flow problems are provably intractable.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Systems Chemistry
Volume3
Issue number1
ISSN1759-2208
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2012

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