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lipogenes

Lipogenes, or lipogenesis, is the metabolic process by which fatty acids and other lipids are synthesized from smaller precursors, primarily acetyl-CoA generated from carbohydrate metabolism. In humans, the liver is the principal site of de novo lipogenesis, with adipose tissue also capable of synthesizing and storing triglycerides.

The core pathway is cytosolic. Acetyl-CoA is first carboxylated to malonyl-CoA by acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), the

The synthesized fatty acids can be elongated, desaturated, and esterified with glycerol-3-phosphate to form triglycerides, which

Clinical relevance and variation exist. In humans, dysregulated lipogenesis is associated with metabolic conditions such as

committed
step
of
fatty
acid
synthesis.
Malonyl-CoA
serves
as
a
substrate
for
the
fatty
acid
synthase
(FAS)
complex,
which
elongates
the
growing
acyl
chain
through
iterative
cycles
to
produce
palmitate
(16:0).
Reducing
equivalents
in
the
form
of
NADPH,
supplied
mainly
by
the
pentose
phosphate
pathway
and
by
other
enzymes,
drive
the
reductive
steps.
The
cytosolic
acetyl-CoA
mainly
derives
from
citrate
exported
from
mitochondria
and
cleaved
by
ATP-citrate
lyase
to
regenerate
acetyl-CoA
and
oxaloacetate.
are
stored
in
adipose
tissue
or
packaged
into
very
low-density
lipoproteins
for
export.
Regulation
is
tightly
controlled:
lipogenesis
is
stimulated
by
insulin
and
high
carbohydrate
intake,
while
glucagon
and
epinephrine
suppress
it.
Malonyl-CoA
also
inhibits
mitochondrial
fatty
acid
entry
by
inhibiting
carnitine
palmitoyltransferase
I,
reducing
fatty
acid
oxidation.
non-alcoholic
fatty
liver
disease
and
obesity.
In
plants
and
other
organisms,
lipid
synthesis
can
occur
in
different
cellular
compartments
but
follows
a
conserved
set
of
biochemical
principles.