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lipidlager

Lipidlager refers to stores of neutral lipids in organisms. In Swedish usage it describes lipid storage both at the cellular level and in adipose tissue. The main lipid components are triglycerides and cholesterol esters, which can be mobilized to supply energy when needed.

In cells, neutral lipids accumulate as lipid droplets, organelles with a hydrophobic core of triglycerides and

Adipose tissue stores large amounts of triglycerides in adipocytes, which expand through lipid uptake and adipogenesis.

Regulation and health relevance: lipidlager function is central to energy homeostasis. Excess or deficient lipid storage

Research and perspectives: lipidlager dynamics involve lipid droplet biogenesis, growth and degradation, lipid droplet–ER contacts, and

cholesterol
esters
surrounded
by
a
phospholipid
monolayer
and
a
coat
of
proteins
such
as
perilipins.
Droplets
form
in
the
endoplasmic
reticulum
and
can
be
mobilized
by
lipolytic
enzymes.
During
fasting,
lipolysis
releases
fatty
acids
to
supply
energy,
while
glycerol
can
feed
gluconeogenesis.
Key
enzymes
include
ATGL,
HSL
and
MGL,
coordinated
by
hormonal
signals
such
as
insulin
and
catecholamines.
is
linked
to
metabolic
diseases
such
as
obesity,
insulin
resistance
and
lipodystrophy.
Ectopic
accumulation
of
lipids
in
liver
or
muscle
can
contribute
to
non-alcoholic
fatty
liver
disease
and
impaired
glucose
tolerance.
lipophagy.
Proteomic
studies
identify
numerous
associated
proteins
that
regulate
storage
and
mobilization,
highlighting
lipidlager
as
an
active
component
of
cellular
metabolism
and
disease.