Investigator

Hai-Yang Li

Affiliated Hospital of Guizhou Medical University, Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery

HLHai-Yang Li
Papers(1)
Fatty acid-binding pr…
Collaborators(3)
Huan WuKun CaoLong Wu
Institutions(2)
Guiyang Medical Unive…Affiliated Hospital O…

Papers

Fatty acid-binding proteins in cancers

Fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) are intracellular lipid chaperones with molecular weights of approximately 14-15 kDa. By binding and transporting fatty acids and lipid-related molecules, FABPs precisely regulate metabolic pathways, signal transduction, and gene expression, playing a central role in cancer initiation and progression. The 11 identified subtypes (FABP1-FABP12; FABP11 is identical to FABP3) exhibit tissue-specific expression and influence tumor progression through metabolic reprogramming, immune microenvironment modulation, and therapy resistance. Metabolically, FABPs enhance fatty acid uptake, β-oxidation, and synthesis, meeting the high proliferative demands of tumors. In immune regulation, FABP4 + macrophages secrete IL-6 to suppress T cell activity, while FABP6 downregulates MHC-I molecule expression to reduce CD8 + T cell infiltration, fostering an immunosuppressive microenvironment. Regarding therapy resistance, FABP4 enhances mitochondrial β-oxidation to reduce apoptosis in ovarian cancer, and FABP5 promotes chemoresistance in HCC via the HIF-1α pathway. Functional heterogeneity exists among subtypes: FABP7 drives glioblastoma stem cell migration via RXRα signaling, while FABP5 exhibits context-dependent roles, promoting HCC progression but suppressing colorectal cancer (CRC) through mTOR-mediated autophagy. Clinically, FABPs serve as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets. However, challenges such as insufficient target specificity, cross-cancer heterogeneity, and normal tissue toxicity remain. Future studies should integrate multi-omics and single-cell technologies to elucidate cell-specific mechanisms and develop precise combination therapies for clinical translation.

1Papers
3Collaborators
Anus DiseasesNeoplasmsTumor MicroenvironmentBiomarkers, Tumor

Positions

Researcher

Affiliated Hospital of Guizhou Medical University · Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery