Monounsaturated fatty acids, the products of SCD-1 catalyzed reactions, can serve as
substrates for the synthesis of various kinds of lipids, including phospholipids, triglycerides, and can also be used as mediators in
signal transduction and differentiation. Because MUFAs are heavily utilized in cellular processes, variation in SCD activity in mammals is expected to influence physiological variables, including
cellular differentiation, insulin sensitivity, metabolic syndrome, atherosclerosis,
cancer, and
obesity. SCD-1 deficiency results in reduced
adiposity, increased insulin sensitivity, and resistance to diet-induced obesity. Under non-fasting conditions, SCD-1 mRNA is highly expressed in
white adipose tissue,
brown adipose tissue, and the
Harderian gland. SCD-1 expression is significantly increased in liver tissue and heart in response to a high-carbohydrate diet, whereas SCD-2 expression is observed in brain tissue and induced during the
neonatal myelination. Diets high in high-saturated as well as monounsaturated-fat can also increase SCD-1 expression, although not to the extent of the lipogenic effect of a high-carb diet. Elevated expression levels of SCD1 is found to be correlated with obesity and tumor malignancy. It is believed that tumor cells obtain most part of their requirement for fatty acids by de novo synthesis. This phenomenon depends on increased expression of fatty acid biosynthetic enzymes that produce required fatty acids in large quantities. Mice that were fed a high-carbohydrate diet had an induced expression of the liver SCD-1 gene and other lipogenic genes through an insulin-mediated
SREBP-1c-dependent mechanism. Activation of SREBP-1c results in upregulated synthesis of MUFAs and liver
triglycerides. SCD-1 knockout mice did not increase de novo
lipogenesis but created an abundance of cholesterol esters. SCD1 function has also been shown to be involved in germ cell determination, adipose tissue specification, liver cell differentiation and cardiac development. The human SCD-1 gene structure and regulation is very similar to that of mouse SCD-1. Overexpression of SCD-1 in humans may be involved in the development of
hypertriglyceridemia,
atherosclerosis, and
diabetes. One study showed that SCD-1 activity was associated with inherited
hyperlipidemia. SCD-1 deficiency has also been shown to reduce ceramide synthesis by downregulating serine palmitoyltransferase. This consequently increases the rate of
beta-oxidation in skeletal muscle. In carbohydrate metabolism studies, knockout SCD-1 mice show increased
insulin sensitivity. Oleate is a major constituent of membrane phospholipids and membrane fluidity is influenced by the ratio of saturated to monounsaturated fatty acids. One proposed mechanism is that an increase in cell membrane fluidity, consisting largely of lipid, activates the
insulin receptor. A decrease in MUFA content of the membrane phospholipids in the SCD-1−/− mice is offset by an increase in polyunsaturated fatty acids, effectively increasing membrane fluidity due to the introduction of more double bonds in the fatty acyl chain. ==See also==