Linoleic acid

Linoleic acid is a lipid of Fatty Acyls (FA) class. Linoleic acid is associated with abnormalities such as Diabetes Mellitus, Non-Insulin-Dependent, Metabolic syndrome, Obesity, Chronic Obstructive Airway Disease and Pneumonia. The involved functions are known as Insulin Resistance, Inflammation, Synthesis, Pathological accumulation of air in tissues and cytokine biosynthesis. The associated genes with Linoleic acid are TNF gene, CCL2 gene and TLR4 gene. The related lipids are palmitoleic acid, nervonic acid and Sphingolipids.

Cross Reference

Introduction

To understand associated biological information of Linoleic acid, we collected biological information of abnormalities, associated pathways, cellular/molecular locations, biological functions, related genes/proteins, lipids and common seen animal/experimental models with organized paragraphs from literatures.

What diseases are associated with Linoleic acid?

Linoleic acid is suspected in Obesity, Diabetes Mellitus, Non-Insulin-Dependent, Metabolic syndrome, Chronic Obstructive Airway Disease, Pneumonia and other diseases in descending order of the highest number of associated sentences.

Related references are mostly published in these journals:

Disease Cross reference Weighted score Related literature
Loading... please refresh the page if content is not showing up.

Possible diseases from mapped MeSH terms on references

We collected disease MeSH terms mapped to the references associated with Linoleic acid

PubChem Associated disorders and diseases

What pathways are associated with Linoleic acid

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

Link to PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

What cellular locations are associated with Linoleic acid?

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

What functions are associated with Linoleic acid?


Related references are published most in these journals:

Function Cross reference Weighted score Related literatures

What lipids are associated with Linoleic acid?

Related references are published most in these journals:

Lipid concept Cross reference Weighted score Related literatures
Loading... please refresh the page if content is not showing up.

What genes are associated with Linoleic acid?

Related references are published most in these journals:


Gene Cross reference Weighted score Related literatures

What common seen animal models are associated with Linoleic acid?

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

NCBI Entrez Crosslinks

All references with Linoleic acid

Download all related citations
Per page 10 20 50 100 | Total 4513
Authors Title Published Journal PubMed Link
Zheng HF et al. Effects of unsaturated fatty acids on calcium-activated potassium current in gastric myocytes of guinea pigs. 2005 World J. Gastroenterol. pmid:15655819
Simopoulos AP Evolutionary aspects of the dietary omega-6:omega-3 fatty acid ratio: medical implications. 2009 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:19696523
Ramsden CE et al. All PUFAs are not created equal: absence of CHD benefit specific to linoleic acid in randomized controlled trials and prospective observational cohorts. 2011 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:21865817
Okuyama H et al. New Cholesterol Guidelines for Longevity (2010). 2011 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:21865826
Legrand P et al. Update of French nutritional recommendations for fatty acids. 2011 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:21865827
Okuyama H et al. Omega3 fatty acids effectively prevent coronary heart disease and other late-onset diseases--the excessive linoleic acid syndrome. 2007 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:17167282
Okuyama H et al. Why isn't the causal relationship between linoleic acid and mortalities from coronary heart disease and stroke revealed by clinical studies? 2007 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:17167283
Okuyama H et al. Mechanisms by which dietary fats affect coronary heart disease mortality. 2007 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:17167284
Okuyama H et al. Cancers common in the USA are stimulated by omega 6 fatty acids and large amounts of animal fats, but suppressed by omega 3 fatty acids and cholesterol. 2007 World Rev Nutr Diet pmid:17167285
Cardoso CR et al. Influence of topical administration of n-3 and n-6 essential and n-9 nonessential fatty acids on the healing of cutaneous wounds. 2004 Mar-Apr Wound Repair Regen pmid:15086775