Abstract

Abnormalities of ganglioside structure characterize the neoplastic state, and aberrant glycosylation has been implicated as underlying many new tumor ganglioside structures. However, variations in ceramide structure can also result in novel tumor gangliosides. To address systematically this aspect of ganglioside metabolism, we have initiated a study of the structures of the ceramide species of an oligosaccharide-homogeneous human tumor-derived ganglioside, GM2. The ganglioside was isolated from neuroblastoma tissue and purified by normal-phase high pressure liquid chromatography. Marked ceramide heterogeneity was observed; 18 individual ceramide species of neuroblastoma GM2 were separated by reversed-phase high pressure liquid chromatography and collected. Their structures were determined by a combination of negative- and positive-ion fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry and collisionally activated dissociation tandem mass spectrometry of the underivatized gangliosides. The striking finding was the detection of alpha-hydroxylation of a significant fraction of each of the major fatty acid species (16:0, 18:0, 20:0, 22:0, and 24:1); alpha-hydroxylated species quantitatively represented almost one-fifth of the total tumor GM2 species. Fatty acyl hydroxylation was also detected in the ceramide of several other human tumor gangliosides. In contrast, as previously known, fatty acyl hydroxylation was not detected in the normal human brain gangliosides GM3, GM2, and GM1. We propose that aberrant fatty acid alpha-hydroxylation is a novel and sometimes quantitatively significant characteristic of human tumor ganglioside metabolism.

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