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Relationship: 1749
Title
Fatty Acid Beta Oxidation, Decreased leads to Decreased, Ketogenesis (production of ketone bodies)
Upstream event
Downstream event
AOPs Referencing Relationship
| AOP Name | Adjacency | Weight of Evidence | Quantitative Understanding | Point of Contact | Author Status | OECD Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antagonist binding to PPARα leading to body-weight loss | adjacent | Moderate | Low | Agnes Aggy (send email) | Open for citation & comment | WPHA/WNT Endorsed |
Taxonomic Applicability
Sex Applicability
| Sex | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Male | Moderate |
| Female | Moderate |
Life Stage Applicability
| Term | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Adult, reproductively mature | Moderate |
Peroxisomes participate in a variety of lipid metabolic pathways including the beta-oxidation of very long-straight chain (<20 C in length) or branched –chain acyl-CoAs (Lazarow 1978, Kersten 2014). The peroxisomal beta-oxidation pathway is not directly coupled to the electron transport chain and oxidative phosporylation, therefore the first oxidation reaction loses energy to heat (H2O2 production) while in the second step, energy is captured in the metabolically accessible form of high-energy electrons in NADH (Mannaerts and Van Veldhoven 1993, Desvergne and Wahli 1999). The peroxisomal beta-oxidation pathway provides fatty acid chain shortening where two carbons are removed in each round of oxidation in the form of acetyl-CoA (Desvergne and Wahli 1999). The shortened chain fatty acids (<20C) can then be transported to the mitochondria to undergo mitochondrial beta-oxidation for complete metabolism of the carbon substrate for cellular energy production (Desvergne and Wahli 1999). Mitochondrial fatty acid beta oxidation catabolizes short, medium and long chain fatty acids (<C20) into acetyl-CoA and ATP. The production of acetyl-CoA monomers is important as they serve as fundamental units for metabolic energy production (ATP) via the citric acid cycle followed by electron-transport chain mediated oxidative phosphorylation (Nelson and Cox, 2000A). Acetyl-CoA is also a fundamental units of energy storage via gluconeogenesis (Nelson and Cox, 2000B) and lipogenesis (Nelson and Cox, 2000C). The liver plays a key role in processing the fundamental energy substrate, acetyl-CoA, into metabolic currencies that contribute to the systemic cellular energy needs of the whole organism. The liver represents a key organ involved in systemic energy distribution given its ability to synthesize glucose (an ability shared only with the kidney, Gerich et al 2001) as well as its exclusive role in the generation of ketone bodies (Cahill 2006, Sengupta et al 2010, Kersten 2014). This is especially important for the metabolic energy needs of the brain which can only use glucose and the ketone body, β-hydroxybutyrate for cellular energy production (Cahill 2006, Owen 2005, Kersten 2014). Therefore, the KE, “ketogenesis (production of ketone bodies)” is critical to supporting general systemic energy homeostasis in fasting events (Cahill 2006, Evans et al 2004, Sengupta et al 2010).
| ID | Experimental Design | Species | Upstream Observation | Downstream Observation | Citation (first author, year) | Notes |
|---|
| Title | First Author | Biological Plausibility |
Dose Concordance |
Temporal Concordance |
Incidence Concordance |
|---|
Biological Plausibility
Dose Concordance Evidence
Temporal Concordance Evidence
Incidence Concordance Evidence
Uncertainties and Inconsistencies
Additional investigations tracing substrate processing, specifically from sources resulting from the KE, “fatty acid beta oxidation” under control as well as starvation conditions would supplement current understanding of the connections between the KE, “fatty acid beta oxidation” and the KE, “ketogenesis (production of ketone bodies)”.
Availability of alternative energy substrates may chance the dynamics of this KER.
As discussed in the previous sections, the degree to which the, KE “fatty acid beta oxidation” affects the KE, “ketogenesis (production of ketone bodies)” is not well described, neither are modulators of the response-response relationships. Certainly, the pathways are interrelated and connected by PPARα as the master regulator of each process, so additional modulators related to resource availability and cellular signaling require exploration. We are not currently aware of any models available to extrapolate results among KEs.
Response-response Relationship
Unknown.
Time-scale
Unknown.
Known Feedforward/Feedback loops influencing this KER
Ketogenesis diminishes after transition from a fasted state to a fed state.
The relationships described herein have been primarily established in human and rodent models. Comparative investigations of ketone body formation comparing human and mouse is not well established relative to fatty-acid oxidation comparisons.