Application Notes:
This product is a well-defined glucosylceramide containing hexanoic acid making it ideal as an internal standard and for
biological systems. Due to the short acyl-chain of the ceramide this product is more water soluble than natural cerebrosides
and can therefore more easily cross cell membranes. Glucosylceramide is a major constituent of skin lipids where it has an
important role in lamellar body formation and in maintaining the water permeability barrier. Glucocerebroside is very
important due to its function as the biosynthetic precursor of lactosylceramide and from there of most of the neutral
oligoglycolipids and gangliosides.1 Glucocerebroside is found in plants, fungi, and animals and is one of the most abundant
glycosphingolipids in plants. Due to the relatively high melting point of cerebrosides (much greater than physiological body
temperature) they have a para-crystalline structure. Glucocerebrosides tend to be concentrated in the outer leaflet of the
plasma membrane in lipid rafts. It has been reported that glucocerebrosides are essential for the activity of tyrosinase (a key
enzyme in melanin biosynthesis), to elicit defense responses in plants, and to help the plasma membrane in plants to
withstand stresses brought about by cold and drought. In Gaucher disease glucocerebrosides accumulate in the spleen, liver,
lungs, bone marrow, and brain due to a deficiency of the enzyme glucocerebrosidase.2,3 This accumulation of
glucocerebroside has been associated with chemotherapy resistance. Glucocerebroside has been shown to be able to modulate
membrane traffic along the endocytic pathway.4
References:
1. D. Sillence et al. “Assay for the transbilayer distribution of glycolipids: selective oxidation of glucosylceramide to glucuronylceramide by TEMPO nitroxyl radicals” Journal of Lipid Research, Vol. 41(8) pp. 1252-1260, 2000
2. C. Walden et al. “Accumulation of Glucosylceramide in Murine Testis, Caused by Inhibition of beta-Glucosidase 2: IMPLICATIONS FOR SPERMATOGENESIS” The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 282 pp. 32655-32664, 2007
3. R. Brady “Gaucher's disease: past, present and future” Baillieres Clin Haematol, Vol. 10:4 pp. 621-634, 1997
4. D. Sillence et al. “Glucosylceramide modulates membrane traffic along the endocytic pathway” Journal of Lipid Research, Vol. 43(11) pp. 1837-1845, 2002