Lipid Metabolism and Fatty Acid Oxidation
Lipid metabolism is the integrated set of pathways by which the body synthesizes, stores, mobilizes, and oxidizes fatty acids, triacylglycerols, cholesterol, and ketone bodies. It links nutrient supply to cellular energy production and membrane biology, and its hormonal regulation switches the body between fat storage in the fed state and fat oxidation during fasting and exercise.
Definition
Lipid metabolism comprises the anabolic pathways that build fatty acids, triacylglycerols, and sterols and the catabolic pathways that hydrolyze and oxidize them, together with the hormonal and transcriptional controls that coordinate flux through these pathways according to nutritional and energetic state.
Scope
This area orients the learner across the major lipid pathways: mitochondrial beta-oxidation of fatty acids for ATP production, cytosolic fatty acid and triacylglycerol synthesis (lipogenesis), the synthesis and feedback-regulated homeostasis of cholesterol, hepatic ketone body production and peripheral utilization, and the lipolysis-lipogenesis cycle that governs adipose energy storage. It treats these as a connected biochemical and physiological system, not as a guide to managing lipid disorders.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How do cells decide between storing lipid and oxidizing it for energy?
- How is fatty acid synthesis reciprocally coordinated with fatty acid oxidation?
- How is cholesterol balance maintained through feedback control of synthesis and uptake?
- When and why does the liver produce ketone bodies, and how are they used by peripheral tissues?
Key concepts
- Beta-oxidation
- Fatty acid and triacylglycerol synthesis
- Cholesterol homeostasis
- Ketone bodies
- Lipolysis and lipogenesis
- Carnitine shuttle
- Malonyl-CoA
- Hormonal switching between fed and fasted states
Key theories
- Malonyl-CoA control of fatty acid oxidation
- Malonyl-CoA, the first committed intermediate of fatty acid synthesis, inhibits carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 and thereby blocks fatty acid entry into mitochondria, providing a reciprocal switch that prevents simultaneous synthesis and oxidation of fatty acids.
- SREBP feedback regulation of lipid synthesis
- Sterol regulatory element-binding proteins are membrane-bound transcription factors that, when cellular sterols are low, are processed to activate genes for cholesterol and fatty acid synthesis, coupling lipid supply to a transcriptional feedback loop.
Mechanisms
In the fed state, insulin promotes glucose uptake and lipogenesis: acetyl-CoA is carboxylated to malonyl-CoA, fatty acids are synthesized and esterified to triacylglycerols, and the rising malonyl-CoA suppresses mitochondrial fatty acid uptake. In fasting or exercise, low insulin and high glucagon or catecholamines activate adipose lipolysis, releasing free fatty acids that travel to the liver and muscle; there, falling malonyl-CoA de-represses the carnitine shuttle so fatty acids enter mitochondria and undergo beta-oxidation to acetyl-CoA, generating NADH, FADH2, and ATP. When hepatic acetyl-CoA exceeds the capacity of the citric acid cycle, it is converted to ketone bodies that serve as fuel for the brain and other tissues. Cholesterol balance is maintained in parallel by feedback control of its synthesis and of receptor-mediated lipoprotein uptake.
Clinical relevance
The pathways summarized here underlie the body's handling of dietary and stored fat and provide the biochemical background for understanding conditions such as fatty acid oxidation disorders, dyslipidemia, fatty liver, and diabetic ketoacidosis. This entry describes normal physiology and regulation for reference and educational purposes and is not a basis for diagnosing or treating any individual.
History
The chemistry of fatty acid oxidation was first sketched by Franz Knoop's labelling experiments at the start of the twentieth century, and the two-carbon "beta-oxidation" mechanism was elaborated through the mid-century work on coenzyme A and the citric acid cycle. The reciprocal regulation of synthesis and oxidation by malonyl-CoA was articulated by McGarry and Foster, while Goldstein and Brown's work on the LDL receptor and the later identification of the SREBP system established the feedback logic of cholesterol and lipid synthesis.
Key figures
- J. Denis McGarry
- Salih Wakil
- Joseph Goldstein
- Michael Brown
- Daniel Steinberg
Related topics
Seminal works
- mcgarry-foster-1980
- horton-2002
- wakil-2009
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between fatty acid oxidation and fatty acid synthesis?
- Oxidation is the catabolic mitochondrial pathway that breaks fatty acids down to acetyl-CoA to release energy, while synthesis is the cytosolic anabolic pathway that builds fatty acids from acetyl-CoA. The two are reciprocally regulated so they do not run at full rate simultaneously.
- Why does the body make ketone bodies?
- During prolonged fasting or carbohydrate scarcity, the liver converts surplus acetyl-CoA from fatty acid oxidation into ketone bodies, providing a water-soluble, transportable fuel that the brain and other tissues can use when glucose is limited.