Saturday, August 2, 2008
A Model for Fatty Acid Transport into the Brain
Abstract  A key function of fatty acid (FA) transport into the brain is to supply polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) that are not synthesized         in brain cells but are essential signaling molecules and components of the phospholipid membrane. In addition, common dietary         FAs such as palmitic acid are also rapidly taken up by the brain and esterified to phospholipids or oxidized to provide cellular         energy. Most evidence shows that FA crossing the blood brain barrier (BBB) is derived mainly from FA/albumin complexes and,         to a lesser extent, from circulating lipoproteins. Our model proposes that FA diffuse across the lipid bilayer of the BBB         without specific transporters to reach brain cells. They cross the luminal and transluminal leaflets of the endothelial cells         and the plasma membrane of neural cells by reversible flip-flop. Acyl-CoA synthetases trap FA by forming acyl-CoA, which cannot         diffuse out of the cell. Selection of FA is controlled largely by enzymes in the pathways of intracellular metabolism, beginning         with the acyl-CoA synthetase.
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