Abstract
Bovine brain cerebrosides (BOV-CER) were separated by high-performance liquid chromatography into cerebroside fractions with a single acyl chain type or with a relatively homogeneous acyl chain distribution. The thermal behavior of these isolated cerebroside fractions was studied by differential scanning calorimetry. Nonhydroxy (n-acyl) fatty acid cerebrosides (NFA-CER) possessing a saturated fatty chain (C16:0, C18:0, C24:0) exhibit their major order-disorder transition temperature TM at 83.degree. C, independent of chain length. NFA-CER possessing primarily unsaturated acyl chains (C24:1) exhibits TM at 70.degree. C. 2-Hydroxy fatty acid cerebrosides (HFA-CER), which possess a saturated hydroxyacyl chain (C18:0h, C24:0h), exhibit TM at 70-72.degree. C. Thus, naturally occurring cerebrosides exhibit high TM''s that do not depend significantly on acyl chain length and that depend only to a small degree on unsaturation and the presence of 2-hydroxy branch in the amide-linked chain. Isolated NFA-CER''s each exhibit metastable polymorphism of the type previously described for unfractionated NFA-CER [Curatolo, W. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 1761]. Polymorphism in HFA-CER is complex, with a different type of thermal behavior observed for each isolated acyl chain fraction studied. On prolonged storage at low temperature, unfractionated HFA-CER and unfractionated BOV-CER reach a highly ordered gel state similar to that which is readily reached by NFA-CER''s. These results indicate that all cerebrosides exhibit metastable polymorphism. However, the kinetic barriers to reaching the stable gel state are greater for HFA-CER and BOV-CER than for NFA-CER.