and low
insulin levels in the blood. Epinephrine binds to a
beta-adrenergic receptor in the cell membrane of the adipocyte, which causes
cAMP to be generated inside the cell. The cAMP activates a
protein kinase, which phosphorylates and thus, in turn, activates a
hormone-sensitive lipase in the fat cell. This lipase cleaves free fatty acids from their attachment to glycerol in the fat stored in the fat droplet of the adipocyte. The free fatty acids and glycerol are then released into the blood. However more recent studies have shown that
adipose triglyceride lipase has to first convert triacylglycerides to diacylglycerides, and that
hormone-sensitive lipase converts the diacylglycerides to monoglycerides and free fatty acids. Monoglycerides are hydrolyzed by monoglyceride lipase. The activity of hormone sensitive lipase is regulated by the circulation hormones
insulin,
glucagon,
norepinephrine, and
epinephrine, as shown in the diagram. in the blood attached to
plasma albumin, its diffusion across the cell membrane using a protein transporter, and its activation, using
ATP, to form
acyl-CoA in the
cytosol. The illustration is, for diagrammatic purposes, of a 12 carbon fatty acid. Most fatty acids in human plasma are 16 or 18 carbon atoms long. by
carnitine-acyl-CoA transferase (CAT). The illustrated acyl chain is, for diagrammatic purposes, only 12 carbon atoms long. Most fatty acids in human plasma are 16 or 18 carbon atoms long. CAT is inhibited by high concentrations of
malonyl-CoA (the first committed step in
fatty acid synthesis) in the cytoplasm. This means that fatty acid synthesis and fatty acid catabolism cannot occur simultaneously in any given cell. of an acyl-CoA molecule in the mitochondrial matrix. During this process an acyl-CoA molecule which is 2 carbons shorter than it was at the beginning of the process is formed. Acetyl-CoA, water and 5
ATP molecules are the other products of each beta-oxidative event, until the entire acyl-CoA molecule has been reduced to a set of
acetyl-CoA molecules. Fatty acids are stored as
triglycerides in the fat depots of
adipose tissue. Between meals they are released as follows: •
Lipolysis, the removal of the fatty acid chains from the glycerol to which they are bound in their storage form as triglycerides (or fats), is carried out by
lipases. These lipases are activated by high
epinephrine and
glucagon levels in the blood (or
norepinephrine secreted by
sympathetic nerves in adipose tissue), caused by declining blood
glucose levels after meals, which simultaneously lowers the
insulin level in the blood. • Long-chain free fatty acids enter metabolizing cells (i.e. most living cells in the body except
red blood cells and
neurons in the
central nervous system) through specific
transport proteins, such as the
SLC27 family fatty acid transport protein. Red blood cells do not contain
mitochondria and are therefore incapable of metabolizing fatty acids; the tissues of the central nervous system cannot use fatty acids, despite containing mitochondria, because long-chain fatty acids (as opposed to medium-chain fatty acids) cannot cross the
blood-brain barrier into the
interstitial fluids that bathe these cells. • Once inside the cell,
long-chain-fatty-acid—CoA ligase catalyzes the reaction between a fatty acid molecule with
ATP (which is broken down to
AMP and inorganic pyrophosphate) to give a fatty acyl-adenylate, which then reacts with free
coenzyme A to give a fatty
acyl-CoA molecule. • In order for the acyl-CoA to enter the mitochondrion the carnitine shuttle is used: • Acyl-CoA is transferred to the hydroxyl group of carnitine by
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I, located on the cytosolic faces of the
outer and
inner mitochondrial membranes. • Acyl-carnitine is shuttled inside by a
carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase, as a carnitine is shuttled outside. • Acyl-carnitine is converted back to acyl-CoA by
carnitine palmitoyltransferase II, located on the interior face of the
inner mitochondrial membrane. The liberated carnitine is shuttled back to the cytosol, as an acyl-CoA is shuttled into the mitochondrial matrix. •
Beta oxidation, in the mitochondrial matrix, then cuts the long carbon chains of the fatty acids (in the form of acyl-CoA molecules) into a series of two-carbon (
acetate) units, which, combined with
co-enzyme A, form molecules of
acetyl CoA, which condense with
oxaloacetate to form
citrate at the "beginning" of the
citric acid cycle. It is convenient to think of this reaction as marking the "starting point" of the cycle, as this is when fuel - acetyl-CoA - is added to the cycle, which will be dissipated as CO and HO with the release of a substantial quantity of energy captured in the form of
ATP, during the course of each turn of the cycle and subsequent
oxidative phosphorylation. : Briefly, the steps in beta oxidation are as follows: • The acetyl-CoA produced by beta oxidation enters the
citric acid cycle in the mitochondrion by combining with
oxaloacetate to form
citrate. Coupled to oxidative phosphorylation this results in the complete combustion of the acetyl-CoA to CO and water. The energy released in this process is captured in the form of 1
GTP and 11
ATP molecules per acetyl-CoA molecule oxidized. Succinyl-CoA is first converted to malate, and then to pyruvate where it is then transported to the matrix to enter the citric acid cycle. In the liver oxaloacetate can be wholly or partially diverted into the
gluconeogenic pathway during fasting, starvation, a low carbohydrate diet, prolonged strenuous exercise, and in uncontrolled
type 1 diabetes mellitus. Under these circumstances, oxaloacetate is hydrogenated to
malate, which is then removed from the mitochondria of the liver cells to be converted into
glucose in the cytoplasm of the liver cells, from where it is released into the blood. Another pathway turns acetol to
methylglyoxal, then to
pyruvate, or to
D-lactaldehyde (via S-D-lactoyl-glutathione or otherwise) then
D-lactate. D-lactate metabolism (to glucose) is slow or impaired in humans, so most of the D-lactate is excreted in the urine; thus D-lactate derived from acetone can contribute significantly to the metabolic acidosis associated with ketosis or isopropanol intoxication. L-Lactate can complete the net conversion of fatty acids into glucose. The first experiment to show conversion of acetone to glucose was carried out in 1951. This, and further experiments used carbon
isotopic labelling. Up to 11% of the glucose can be derived from acetone during starvation in humans. The glycerol released into the blood during the
lipolysis of triglycerides in adipose tissue can only be taken up by the liver. Here it is converted into
glycerol 3-phosphate by the action of
glycerol kinase which hydrolyzes one molecule of
ATP per glycerol molecule which is phosphorylated. Glycerol 3-phosphate is then oxidized to
dihydroxyacetone phosphate, which is, in turn, converted into
glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate by the enzyme
triose phosphate isomerase. From here the three carbon atoms of the original glycerol can be oxidized via
glycolysis, or converted to glucose via
gluconeogenesis. ==Other functions and uses of fatty acids==