C19 Ceramide is a naturally occurring ceramide that has been found in J. juncea extracts as well as rat brain and mouse heart.[1],[2],[3] It is elevated in adult and decreased in juvenile whole rat brain extracts by 114 and 37%, respectively, following chronic ethanol exposure.[2] C19 Ceramide is also increased in mouse hearts following administration of angiotensin II.[3]
C4 Ceramide is a bioactive sphingolipid and cell-permeable analog of naturally occurring ceramides. [1] [2] [3] It inhibits IL-4 production by 16% in EL4 T cells stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate when used at a concentration of 10 μM. [1] C4 Ceramide is cytotoxic to SK-BR-3 and MCF-7 Adr breast cancer cells (IC50s = 15.9 and 19.9 μM, respectively). [2] C4 Ceramide also increases maturation and stability of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) proteins bearing the F508 deletion (F508del) mutation, enhances cAMP-activated chloride secretion, and suppresses secretion of IL-8 in primary epithelial cells isolated from patients with cystic fibrosis.[3]
C2 Ceramide (d14:1 2:0) is a bioactive sphingolipid. Dietary administration of C2 ceramide (d14:1 2:0) (100 μM) induces lipotoxic cardiomyopathy via increasing diastolic and systolic diameter as well as reducing fractional shortening and the number of normal cardiac contractile events in Drosophila.
C18 D-threoCeramide (d18:1 18:0) is a synthetic ceramide and stereoisomer of C18 ceramide .1It inhibits rat brain mitochondrial ceramidase (mt-CDase) with an IC50value of 16.6 μM.2[Matreya, LLC. Catalog No. 1855] 1.Koolath, S., Murai, Y., Suga, Y., et al.Chiral combinatorial preparation and biological evaluation of unique ceramides for inhibition of sphingomyelin synthaseChirality32(3)308-313(2019) 2.Usta, J., El Bawab, S., Roddy, P., et al.Structural requirements of ceramide and sphingosine based inhibitors of mitochondrial ceramidaseBiochemistry40(32)9657-9668(2001)
C18:1 Ceramide is a naturally occurring ceramide.[1][2][3] Levels of C18:1 ceramide are elevated in overweight and insulin-resistant mice and cattle.[1][2] C18:1 Ceramide is also increased in the plasma and ovarian tissue of patients with advanced ovarian cancer. [3]
C17 Ceramide is a synthetic ceramide that contains a non-natural C17:0 fatty acid acylated to sphingosine. It has been used as a marker of arylsulfatase A and sphingolipid activator B activity in patients undergoing enzyme replacement therapy for the genetic disease metachromatic leukodystrophy.
C6 L-erythro Ceramide is a bioactive sphingolipid and cell-permeable analog of naturally occurring ceramides. It is metabolized by ceramide glucosyltransferase to form C6 L-erythro glucosylceramide. C6 L-erythro Ceramide is cytotoxic to U937 cells (IC50 = 18 μM).
C8 D-threo Ceramide is a bioactive sphingolipid and cell-permeable analog of naturally occurring ceramides. It is cytotoxic to U937 cells (IC50 = 17 μM) and induces nuclear DNA fragmentation 5- to 6-fold more potently than C8 ceramide . C8 D-threo Ceramide is a substrate for E. coli diacylglycerol kinase. It activates ceramide-activated protein kinase (CAPK) in U937 cells. C8 D-threo Ceramide also enhances V. cholerae cytolysin pore formation in liposome lipid membranes, as measured by calcein release, with a 50% release dose (RD50) value of ~5 μg ml.