AbstractCeramide (Cer) has been identified as an active lipid second messenger in the regulation of cell growth, differentiation, and apoptosis. Its analog, dihydroceramide, without the 4 to 5 trans double bond in the sphingoid backbone lacks these biological effects. To establish the conformational features that distinguish ceramide from its analogs, nuclear magnetic resonance spectral data were acquired for diluted samples of ceramides (C2- and C18-Cer), dihydroceramide (C16-DHCer), and deoxydihydroceramide (C18-DODHCer). Our results suggest that in both C2- and C18-Cer, an H-bond network is formed in which the amide proton NH is donated to the OH groups on carbons C1 and C3 of the sphingosine backbone. Two tightly bound water molecules a...
Sphingomyelin is a major constituent of most eukaryotic cell plasma membranes. During apoptosis, sph...
Ceramides are a lipid subclass of the sphingolipids that show large structural diversity. Structural...
AbstractCeramides (Cers) may exert their biological activity through changes in membrane structure a...
AbstractThe biological activities of ceramides show a large variation with small changes in molecula...
AbstractCeramides play a key modulatory role in many cellular processes, which results from their ef...
AbstractSphingolipids are key lipid regulators of cell viability: ceramide is one of the key molecul...
This study utilized fluorescent analogs to characterize the intracellular transport and metabolism o...
AbstractTo study the role of the interfacial properties of ceramides in their interlipid interaction...
AbstractCeramides are sphingolipids that greatly stabilize ordered membrane domains (lipid rafts), a...
AbstractMammalian ceramides constitute a family of at least a few hundred closely related molecules ...
AbstractThe sphingolipid ceramides are known to influence lipid lateral organization in biological m...
AbstractCeramide (Cer) is involved in the regulation of several biological processes, such as apopto...
Ceramide is a major actor in the sphingolipid signaling pathway elicited by various kinds of cell st...
AbstractCeramides and dihydroceramides are N-acyl derivatives of sphingosine and sphinganine, respec...
Ceramide is a bioactive sphingolipid involved in regulation of numerous cell signaling pathways. Evi...
Sphingomyelin is a major constituent of most eukaryotic cell plasma membranes. During apoptosis, sph...
Ceramides are a lipid subclass of the sphingolipids that show large structural diversity. Structural...
AbstractCeramides (Cers) may exert their biological activity through changes in membrane structure a...
AbstractThe biological activities of ceramides show a large variation with small changes in molecula...
AbstractCeramides play a key modulatory role in many cellular processes, which results from their ef...
AbstractSphingolipids are key lipid regulators of cell viability: ceramide is one of the key molecul...
This study utilized fluorescent analogs to characterize the intracellular transport and metabolism o...
AbstractTo study the role of the interfacial properties of ceramides in their interlipid interaction...
AbstractCeramides are sphingolipids that greatly stabilize ordered membrane domains (lipid rafts), a...
AbstractMammalian ceramides constitute a family of at least a few hundred closely related molecules ...
AbstractThe sphingolipid ceramides are known to influence lipid lateral organization in biological m...
AbstractCeramide (Cer) is involved in the regulation of several biological processes, such as apopto...
Ceramide is a major actor in the sphingolipid signaling pathway elicited by various kinds of cell st...
AbstractCeramides and dihydroceramides are N-acyl derivatives of sphingosine and sphinganine, respec...
Ceramide is a bioactive sphingolipid involved in regulation of numerous cell signaling pathways. Evi...
Sphingomyelin is a major constituent of most eukaryotic cell plasma membranes. During apoptosis, sph...
Ceramides are a lipid subclass of the sphingolipids that show large structural diversity. Structural...
AbstractCeramides (Cers) may exert their biological activity through changes in membrane structure a...