Artigo Revisado por pares

COMPOSITION OF CEREBRAL LIPIDS IN MURINE SUDANOPHILIC LEUCODYSTROPHY: THE JIMPY MUTANT

1970; Wiley; Volume: 17; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1471-4159.1970.tb00503.x

ISSN

1471-4159

Autores

E. L. Hogan, K. C. Joseph, Gerhard Schmidt,

Tópico(s)

Alzheimer's disease research and treatments

Resumo

Abstract— The composition of sphingolipids and phospholipids of mouse brain during myelination was determined in normal animals and in mice with a genetically‐determined disorder of myelin formation. Myelination was normally characterized by a two‐fold increase in total phospholipids of brain, a four‐fold increase in total sphingolipids, and a six‐fold increase in cerebrosides. The Jimpy mutant, with defective formation of myelin in the central nervous system, demonstrated a marked deficiency of cerebrosides and a significantly lower content of total sphingolipids, without alteration of the composition of phospholipids. The increasing content of cerebrosides in the brains of the leucodystrophic mutant at the time in development when myelination is most active and the subsequent relative deficit suggest that the failure of myelin formation is not the result of a defect in biosynthesis of cerebrosides.

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