4.6 Review

Very long chain fatty acid-containing lipids: a decade of novel insights from the study of ELOVL4

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 62, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jlr.2021.100030

Keywords

very long chain saturated fatty acids; retinal lipids; autosomal dominant; Stargardt macular dystrophy; spinocerebellar ataxia 34; erythrokeratodermia variabilis; very long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 EY030513, R21 AR076035]
  2. Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology
  3. BrightFocus Foundation
  4. Knights Templar Eye Foundation
  5. NIH [R01EY04149, P30EY021725, R21NS090117, EY030043]
  6. Research to Prevent Blindness
  7. Presbyterian Health Foundation

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Lipids, specifically VLC-PUFA and VLC-SFA synthesized by the enzyme ELOVL4, play critical roles in maintaining cellular function in tissues such as the retina and brain. ELOVL4 and its products are essential for life, with mutations affecting fatty acid biosynthesis leading to various tissue-specific human disorders. This review highlights the importance of ELOVL4 and its products in cellular function and the need for further research in understanding their roles.
Lipids play essential roles in maintaining cell structure and function by modulating membrane fluidity and cell signaling. The fatty acid elongase-4 (ELOVL4) protein, expressed in retina, brain, Meibomian glands, skin, testes and sperm, is an essential enzyme that mediates tissue-specific biosynthesis of both VLC-PUFA and VLC-saturated fatty acids (VLCSFA). These fatty acids play critical roles in maintaining retina and brain function, neuroprotection, skin permeability barrier maintenance, and sperm function, among other important cellular processes. Mutations in ELOVL4 that affect biosynthesis of these fatty acids cause several distinct tissue-specific human disorders that include blindness, age-related cerebellar atrophy and ataxia, skin disorders, early-childhood seizures, mental retardation, and mortality, which underscores the essential roles of ELOVL4 products for life. However, the mechanisms by which one tissue makes VLC-PUFA and another makes VLC-SFA, and how these fatty acids exert their important functional roles in each tissue, remain unknown. This review summarizes research over that last decade that has contributed to our current understanding of the role of ELOVL4 and its products in cellular function. In the retina, VLC-PUFA and their bioactive Elovanoids are essential for retinal function. In the brain, VLCSFA are enriched in synaptic vesicles and mediate neuronal signaling by determining the rate of neurotransmitter release essential for normal neuronal function. These findings point to ELOVL4 and its products as being essential for life. Therefore, mutations and/or age-related epigenetic modifications of fatty acid biosynthetic gene activity that affect VLCSFA and VLC-PUFA biosynthesis contribute to agerelated dysfunction of ELOVL4-expressing tissues.

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