Nonhydroxylated 1-O-acylceramides in vernix caseosa

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Abstract

Vernix caseosa, the waxy substance that coats the skin of newborn babies, has an extremely complex lipid composition. We have explored these lipids and identified nonhydroxylated 1-O-acylceramides (1-O-ENSs) as a new class of lipids in vernix caseosa. These ceramides mostly contain saturated C11–C38 ester-linked (1-O) acyls, saturated C12–C39 amide-linked acyls, and C16–C24 sphingoid bases. Because their fatty acyl chains are frequently branched, numerous molecular species were separable and detectable by HPLC/MS: we found more than 2,300 molecular species, 972 of which were structurally characterized. The most abundant 1-O-ENSs contained straight-chain and branched fatty acyls with 20, 22, 24, or 26 carbons in the 1-O position, 24 or 26 carbons in the N position, and sphingosine. The 1-O-ENSs were isolated using multistep TLC and HPLC and they accounted for 1% of the total lipid extract. The molecular species of 1-O-ENSs were separated on a C18 HPLC column using an acetonitrile/propan-2-ol gradient and detected by APCI-MS, and the structures were elucidated by high-resolution and tandem MS. Medium-polarity 1-O-ENSs likely contribute to the cohesiveness and to the waterproofing and moisturizing properties of vernix caseosa.

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Harazim, E., Vrkoslav, V., Buděšínský, M., Harazim, P., Svoboda, M., Plavka, R., … Cvačka, J. (2018). Nonhydroxylated 1-O-acylceramides in vernix caseosa. Journal of Lipid Research, 59(11), 2164–2173. https://doi.org/10.1194/jlr.M088864

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