Metabolic Flexibility and Metabolic Engineering Associated with Health and Diseases

A special issue of Metabolites (ISSN 2218-1989). This special issue belongs to the section "Cell Metabolism".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2024 | Viewed by 397

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology II, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
Interests: signaling pathways; diabetes; metabolic flexibility; early programming; obesity; muscle differentiation
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

E-Mail Website
Guest Editor
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology II, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
Interests: metabolic flexibility; nutritional regulation of gene expression; metabolic engineering
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Metabolic flexibility is the capability of a system to regulate fuel oxidation or storage (primarily glucose and fatty acids) in response to nutrient availability. Metabolic flexibility also relies on organ interplay since the liver, adipose tissue and muscles regulate energy homeostasis in a coordinated fashion depending on the caloric intake and energy demand.

Metabolic flexibility has been associated with the context of fuel selection in the transition from fasting to feeding, or from fasting to insulin stimulation to explain insulin resistance. Then, the term metabolic flexibility has changed to incorporate other metabolic circumstances and tissues and more general states of physiological adaptability. Metabolic flexibility is tissue-specific in response to nocturnal and diurnal fasting and feeding conditions.

Exercise is another physiological condition that requires metabolic flexibility so that fuel availability is coupled with the metabolic machinery to cope with huge increases in energy demands. The duration and intensity of exercise can profoundly impact the energy demand, taxing energy reserves and catabolic pathways in different ways.

Specific areas that will be addressed include the impact of metabolic flexibility on different tissues and organs, the metabolic inflexibility in diseases such as Diabetes, Obesity, Cancer, Inflammation, and Non-Alcoholic Fatty Acid Liver Disease. Manuscripts dealing with other pertinent challenging issues are also highly desired.

This Special Issue will familiarize readers with the molecular mechanisms involved in the metabolic flexibility/inflexibility ratio in different physiological or pathological situations and in different organs and tissues. 

Prof. Dr. Maria D. Giron-Gonzalez
Prof. Dr. Rafael Salto-Gonzalez
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • metabolic flexibility
  • metabolic inflexibility
  • exercise
  • muscle
  • liver
  • adipose tissue
  • insulin resistance
  • obesity
  • cancer
  • metabolic syndrome
  • early programming

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