Abstract

In recent years, the functions of glycolipids have been intensively studied. Before the research of the roles of glycolipids in the inner ear, it seemed to be necessary to demonstrate the composition of glycolipids at first. Therefore, rat cochlea has been examined for glycolipid composition in the present study. Glycolipids extracted from 200 cochlea samples were separated into neutral and acidic glycolipid fractions. Each fraction was analyzed by thin-layer chromatography. The neutral glycolipid was almost exclusively galactosylceramide (cerebroside) with trace amounts of globoside and unidentified glycolipids. In acidic glycolipids, sulfated galactosylceramide (cerebroside sulfate) was most abundant. Of the gangliosides (sialic acid-containing glycolipids), ganglioside GM3 (51.8%) was the predominant component, and GM2 (6.0%), GM1 (8.8%), GD3 (10.7%), GD1a (8.7%), GD1b (5.9%), and GT1b (3.6%) were also detected. In addition to these, rat cochlea also contained several, minor, unidentified gangliosides. This pattern of the cochlear acidic glycolipids is very similar to that of the renal acidic glycolipids. This finding seems to be very interesting when considering that the toxic side effects of aminoglycosides occur only in the kidney and the inner ear.

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