Protein palmitoylation: A potential therapeutic target in cardiovascular diseases.
Zhao. Sijia S; Yang. Yanyan Y; Li. Hong H; Sun. Pin P; He. Xiangqin X; Wang. Chao C; Zhang. Jingjing J; Tian. Yu Y; Yu. Tao T; Jiang. Zhirong Z
Key Findings
- Palmitoylation controls where proteins sit in cells and how they function.
- Disrupted palmitoylation is associated with the development and progression of cardiovascular diseases.
- Enzymes that add or remove palmitate (palmitoyltransferases and thioesterases) are potential drug targets for heart‑related conditions.
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, the review offers limited direct actions. It highlights that future drugs might aim at palmitoylation pathways, but currently there are no specific supplements, dosages, or protocols to influence this process safely. Keep an eye on emerging therapies, but focus on proven lifestyle and metabolic strategies for heart health.
Summary
The article reviews how attaching a fatty acid called palmitate to proteins (palmitoylation) affects heart and blood‑vessel health. It explains that this modification helps proteins stick to cell membranes, move around inside cells, and can influence how they are broken down. Changes in palmitoylation are linked to heart disease, and targeting this process might become a new way to treat such conditions.
Abstract
Palmitoylation, an essential covalent attachment of a fatty acid (usually C16 palmitate) to cysteine residues within proteins, is crucial for regulating protein functionality and enzymatic activities. This lipid modification facilitates the anchoring of proteins to cellular membranes, dictating their subcellular distribution and influencing protein transport dynamics and intracellular positioning. Additionally, it plays a role in regulating protein degradation through the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Palmitoylation is implicated in the pathogenesis and progression of cardiovascular diseases by modulating substrates and prompting additional post-translational modifications, as well as by interacting with other molecular alterations. Moreover, an intervention strategy focusing on palmitoylation processes is anticipated to offer novel therapeutic avenues for cardiovascular pathologies and address extant challenges in clinical settings. This review consolidates current research on the role and importance of palmitoylation in cardiovascular diseases by exploring its regulatory functions, the catalyzing enzymes, and the involved substrates. It highlights recent discoveries connecting palmitoylation-targeted therapies to cardiovascular health and examines potential approaches and future challenges in cardiovascular treatment.
Study Information
pubmed
2025
2025-07-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.apsb.2025.07.041
164