Litcius/Paper detail

Role of Fatty Acids β-Oxidation in the Metabolic Interactions Between Organs

Alexander Panov, Vladimir Mayorov, Sergey Dikalov

2024International Journal of Molecular Sciences43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In recent decades, several discoveries have been made that force us to reconsider old ideas about mitochondria and energy metabolism in the light of these discoveries. In this review, we discuss metabolic interaction between various organs, the metabolic significance of the primary substrates and their metabolic pathways, namely aerobic glycolysis, lactate shuttling, and fatty acids β-oxidation. We rely on the new ideas about the supramolecular structure of the mitochondrial respiratory chain (respirasome), the necessity of supporting substrates for fatty acids β-oxidation, and the reverse electron transfer via succinate dehydrogenase during β-oxidation. We conclude that ATP production during fatty acid β-oxidation has its upper limits and thus cannot support high energy demands alone. Meanwhile, β-oxidation creates conditions that significantly accelerate the cycle: glucose-aerobic glycolysis-lactate-gluconeogenesis-glucose. Therefore, glycolytic ATP production becomes an important energy source in high energy demand. In addition, lactate serves as a mitochondrial substrate after converting to pyruvate + H+ by the mitochondrial lactate dehydrogenase. All coupled metabolic pathways are irreversible, and the enzymes are organized into multienzyme structures.

Topics & Concepts

GlycolysisBeta oxidationBiochemistryCitric acid cycleGluconeogenesisMetabolic pathwayMitochondrionAnaerobic glycolysisFatty acidMetabolismOxidative phosphorylationChemistryPyruvate decarboxylationFlux (metallurgy)BiologyOrganic chemistryMitochondrial Function and PathologyAdipose Tissue and MetabolismMetabolism and Genetic Disorders