Epidermal 1‐ O ‐acylceramides appear with the establishment of the water permeability barrier in mice and are produced by maturating keratinocytes

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Rabionet, Mariona | Bernard, Pauline | Pichery, Melanie | Marsching, Christian | Bayerle, Aline | Dworski, Shaalee | Kamani, Mustafa | Chitraju, Chandramohan | Gluchowski, Nina | Gabriel, Katlyn | Asadi, Abolfazl | Ebel, Philipp | Hoekstra, Menno | Dumas, Sabrina | Ntambi, James | Jacobsson, Anders | Willecke, Klaus | Medin, Jeffrey | Jonca, Nathalie | Sandhoff, Roger

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. 1-O-Acylceramides (1-OACs) have a fatty acid esterified to the 1-hydroxyl of the sphingosine head group of the ceramide, and recently we identified these lipids as natural components of human and mouse epidermis. Here we show epidermal 1-OACs arise shortly before birth during the establishment of the water permeability barrier in mice. Fractionation of human epidermis indicates 1-OACs concentrate in the stratum corneum. During in vitro maturation into reconstructed human epidermis, human keratinocytes dramatically increase 1-OAC levels indicating they are one source of epidermal 1-OACs. In search of potential enzymes responsible for 1-OAC synthesis in vivo, we analyzed mutant mice with deficiencies of ceramide synthases (Cers2, Cers3, or Cers4), diacylglycerol acyltransferases (Dgat1 or Dgat2), elongase of very long fatty acids 3 (Elovl3), lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase (Lcat), stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (Scd1), or acidic ceramidase (Asah1). Overall levels of 1-OACs did not decrease in any mouse model. In Cers3 and Dgat2-deficient epidermis they even increased in correlation with deficient skin barrier function. Dagt2 deficiency reshapes 1-OAC synthesis with an increase in 1-OACs with N-linked non-hydroxylated fatty acids and a 60% decrease compared to control in levels of 1-OACs with N-linked hydroxylated palmitate. As none of the single enzyme deficiencies we examined resulted in a lack of 1-OACs, we conclude that either there is functional redundancy in forming 1-OAC and more than one enzyme is involved, and/or an unknown acyltransferase of the epidermis performs the final step of 1-OAC synthesis, the implications of which are discussed.

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