While proliferating cells optimize their metabolism to produce biomass, the metabolic objectives of cells that perform non-proliferative tasks are unclear. The opposing requirements for optimizing each objective result in a trade-off that forces single cells to prioritize their metabolic needs and optimally allocate limited resources. Here, we present single-cell optimization objective and trade-off inference (SCOOTI), which infers metabolic objectives and trade-offs in biological systems by integrating bulk and single-cell omics data, using metabolic modeling and machine learning. We validated SCOOTI by identifying essential genes from CRISPR-Cas9 screens in embryonic stem cells, and by inferring the metabolic objectives of quiescent cells, during different cell-cycle phases. Applying this to embryonic cell states, we observed a decrease in metabolic entropy upon development. We further uncovered a trade-off between glutathione and biosynthetic precursors in one-cell zygote, two-cell embryo, and blastocyst cells, potentially representing a trade-off between pluripotency and proliferation. A record of this paper's transparent peer review process is included in the supplemental information.
Keywords: genome-scale metabolic modeling; machine learning; metabolic networks; metabolomics; proteomics; stem cells; transcriptomics.
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