Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9757676 | Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
IR spectroscopic studies are reported for N-stearyl-d-erythro-phytosphingosine (Cer NP) and N-stearyl-2-hydroxy-d-erythro-phytosphingosine (Cer AP) in a hydrated model of the skin lipid barrier comprised of equimolar mixtures of each ceramide with cholesterol and d35-stearic acid. Examination of the methylene stretching, rocking and bending modes reveal some rotational freedom and hexagonal packing in both the ceramide and stearic acid chains. Analysis of the acid carbonyl stretch and the ceramide Amide I modes show both shift to higher frequencies, indicating weaker hydrogen bonding, in the mixed systems compared to the pure materials. For both systems, the fatty acid chain disordering temperatures are significantly increased from those of the pure acids. The observed behaviors of these phytosphingosine ceramide systems are fundamentally different from the previously reported analogous sphingosine ceramide systems. The implications of these observations for lipid organization in the stratum corneum are briefly discussed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Chemistry (General)
Authors
Mark E. Rerek, Dina Van Wyck, Richard Mendelsohn, David J. Moore,