Ceramides and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation in obesity

Publication date

2017-12-22T10:44:59Z

2017-12-22T10:44:59Z

2016-12-21

2017-12-22T10:44:59Z

Abstract

: Obesity is an epidemic, complex disease that is characterized by increased glucose, lipids, and low-grade inflammation in the circulation, among other factors. It creates the perfect scenario for the production of ceramide, the building block of the sphingolipid family of lipids, which is involved in metabolic disorders such as obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. In addition, obesity causes a decrease in fatty acid oxidation (FAO), which contributes to lipid accumulation within the cells, conferringmore susceptibility to cell dysfunction. C16:0 ceramide, a specific ceramide species, has been identified recently as the principal mediator of obesity-derived insulin resistance, impaired fatty acid oxidation, and hepatic steatosis. In this review, we have sought to cover the importance of the ceramide species and their metabolism, the main ceramide signaling pathways in obesity, and the link between C16:0 ceramide, FAO, and obesity.¿Fucho, R., Casals, N., Serra, D., Herrero, L. Ceramides and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation in obesity. FASEB J. 31, 000-000 (2017). www.fasebj.org

Document Type

Article


Submitted version

Language

English

Publisher

The Federation of American Society of Experimental Biology

Related items

Versió preprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201601156R

The FASEB Journal , 2016, vol. 31, p. 1-10

https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201601156R

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(c) The Federation of American Society of Experimental Biology, 2016

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