Membrane Fatty Acid Transporters as Regulators of Lipid Metabolism: Implications for Metabolic Disease
Maastricht University · University of Guelph
Abstract
Long-chain fatty acids and lipids serve a wide variety of functions in mammalian homeostasis, particularly in the formation and dynamic properties of biological membranes and as fuels for energy production in tissues such as heart and skeletal muscle. On the other hand, long-chain fatty acid metabolites may exert toxic effects on cellular functions and cause cell injury. Therefore, fatty acid uptake into the cell and intracellular handling need to be carefully controlled. In the last few years, our knowledge of the regulation of cellular fatty acid uptake has dramatically increased. Notably, fatty acid uptake was found to occur by a mechanism that resembles that of cellular glucose uptake. Thus, following an…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 485
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Fatty acid
- Biochemistry
- Glucose transporter
- adipocyte protein 2
- Biology
- Intracellular
- Glucose uptake
- Lipid metabolism
- Affordable and clean energy