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Emerging roles for fatty acid oxidation in cancer

Review Articles

Emerging roles for fatty acid oxidation in cancer

Ma Jialin
Wang Shuxian
Zhang Pingfeng
Zheng Sihao
Li Xiangpan
Li Juanjuan
Pei Huadong
Genes & Diseases第12卷, 第4期纸质出版 2025-07-01在线发表 2024-12-20
9000

Fatty acid oxidation (FAO) denotes the mitochondrial aerobic process responsible for breaking down fatty acids (FAs) into acetyl-CoA units. This process holds a central position in the cancer metabolic landscape, with certain tumor cells relying primarily on FAO for energy production. Over the past decade, mounting evidence has underscored the critical role of FAO in various cellular processes such as cell growth, epigenetic modifications, tissue-immune homeostasis, cell signal transduction, and more. FAO is tightly regulated by multiple evolutionarily conserved mechanisms, and any dysregulation can predispose to cancer development. In this view, we summarize recent findings to provide an updated understanding of the multifaceted roles of FAO in tumor development, metastasis, and the response to cancer therapy. Additionally, we explore the regulatory mechanisms of FAO, laying the groundwork for potential therapeutic interventions targeting FAO in cancers within the metabolic landscape.

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Cancer progressionDrug resistanceFatty acid oxidationMetabolism reprogrammingOncotherapy