Simple sphingolipids, which include the sphingoid bases and ceramides, make up the early products of the sphingolipid synthetic pathways. • Sphingoid bases are the fundamental building blocks of all sphingolipids. The main mammalian sphingoid bases are dihydrosphingosine and sphingosine, while dihydrosphingosine and phytosphingosine are the principal sphingoid bases in yeast. Sphingosine, dihydrosphingosine, and phytosphingosine may be phosphorylated. •
Ceramides, as a general class, are
N-acylated sphingoid bases lacking additional head groups. • Dihydroceramide is produced by
N-acylation of dihydrosphingosine. Dihydroceramide is found in both yeast and mammalian systems. •
Ceramide is produced in mammalian systems by desaturation of dihydroceramide by dihydroceramide desaturase 1 (DES1). This highly bioactive molecule may also be phosphorylated to form
ceramide-1-phosphate. •
Phytoceramide is produced in yeast by hydroxylation of dihydroceramide at C-4. Complex sphingolipids may be formed by addition of head groups to ceramide or phytoceramide: •
Sphingomyelins have a
phosphocholine or
phosphoethanolamine molecule with an
ester linkage to the 1-hydroxy group of a ceramide. •
Glycosphingolipids are ceramides with one or more
sugar residues joined in a β-
glycosidic linkage at the 1-hydroxyl position (see image). •
Cerebrosides have a single
glucose or
galactose at the 1-hydroxy position. •
Sulfatides are sulfated cerebrosides. •
Gangliosides have at least three sugars, one of which must be
sialic acid. •
Inositol-containing ceramides, which are derived from phytoceramide, are produced in yeast. These include inositol phosphorylceramide,
mannose inositol phosphorylceramide, and mannose diinositol phosphorylceramide. == Mammalian sphingolipid metabolism ==