Ecological lipidology.
Laura Christin TrautenbergMarko BrankatschkAndrej ShevchenkoStuart WigbyKlaus ReinhardtPublished in: eLife (2022)
Dietary lipids (DLs), particularly sterols and fatty acids, are precursors for endogenous lipids that, unusually for macronutrients, shape cellular and organismal function long after ingestion. These functions - cell membrane structure, intracellular signalling, and hormonal activity - vary with the identity of DLs, and scale up to influence health, survival, and reproductive fitness, thereby affecting evolutionary change. Our Ecological Lipidology approach integrates biochemical mechanisms and molecular cell biology into evolution and nutritional ecology. It exposes our need to understand environmental impacts on lipidomes, the lipid specificity of cell functions, and predicts the evolution of lipid-based diet choices. Broad interdisciplinary implications of Ecological Lipidology include food web alterations, species responses to environmental change, as well as sex differences and lifestyle impacts on human nutrition, and opportunities for DL-based therapies.
Keyphrases
- human health
- fatty acid
- physical activity
- risk assessment
- climate change
- single cell
- cell therapy
- weight loss
- public health
- healthcare
- endothelial cells
- mental health
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- genome wide
- cardiovascular disease
- dna methylation
- adipose tissue
- skeletal muscle
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- pluripotent stem cells