Lipid metabolism in homeostasis and disease.

Journal: Signal transduction and targeted therapy

This review outlines how lipid metabolism shapes immune cell function and its relevance to human disease and therapy.

Key points:

  • Scope of the review: The authors summarize the historical development and major milestones in lipid metabolism research and integrate this with current understanding of immune cell biology.
  • Lipid metabolism in immune cells: They describe how macrophages, T cells, B cells, and neutrophils depend on lipid acquisition, synthesis, transport, and signaling for:
    • Proliferation
    • Differentiation (e.g., lineage commitment, effector vs regulatory phenotypes)
    • Activation and effector functions
  • Mechanistic layers of regulation: The review emphasizes multilevel control of lipid metabolism in immune cells:
    • Genetic regulation
    • Epigenetic mechanisms
    • Posttranscriptional regulation (e.g., RNA-level control)
    • Posttranslational modification of proteins

    These regulatory tiers collectively influence immune cell behavior and responses.

  • Disease relevance: Dysregulated lipid metabolism in immune cells is linked to:
    • Autoimmune diseases
    • Cancer
    • Neurodegenerative diseases
    • Cardiovascular diseases
    • Aging-related changes
    • Metabolic disorders (e.g., diabetes)
  • Therapeutic implications: The authors review:
    • Existing and emerging strategies that target lipid metabolism to modulate immunity
    • Ongoing global clinical trial efforts in this area
    • Future directions, including development of lipid-derived biomarkers and novel therapeutic approaches based on manipulating lipid-immune interactions.

Leave a Reply