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The carnitine system and body composition

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Abstract.

Carnitine is a trimethylamine molecule that plays a unique role in cell energy metabolism. Mitochondrial betaoxidation of long-chain fatty acids, the major process by which fatty acids are oxidized, is ubiquitously dependent on carnitine. Control of mitochondrial beta-oxidation through carnitine adapts to differing requirements in different tissues. The physiological role of carnitine and its system in body composition is understood from insights into skeletal muscle metabolism, which converge into the metabolic heterogeneity of muscle fibers, and contractile properties that are correlated with phenotypes of resistance to fatigue. In skeletal muscle, the importance of the function of the carnitine system in the control and regulation of fuel partitioning not only relates to the metabolism of fatty acids and the capacity for fatty acid utilization, but also to systemic fat balance and insulin resistance. The carnitine system is shown to be determinant in insulin regulation of fat and glucose metabolic rate in skeletal muscle, this being critical in determining body composition and relevant raised levels of risk factors for cardiovascular disease, obesity, hypertension, and type 2 diabetes.

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Correspondence to M. Calvani.

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Reda, E., D’Iddio, S., Nicolai, R. et al. The carnitine system and body composition. Acta Diabetol 40 (Suppl 1), s106–s113 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00592-003-0040-z

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00592-003-0040-z

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