Elias P M, Menon G K, Grayson S, Brown B E, Rehfeld S J
Dermatology Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center, San Francisco, CA 94121.
Am J Anat. 1987 Oct;180(2):161-77. doi: 10.1002/aja.1001800206.
In terrestrial mammals, stratum corneum lipids derive from two sources: deposition of lamellar body lipids in stratum corneum interstices and excretion of sebaceous lipids onto the skin surface, resulting in a two-compartment ("bricks and mortar") system of lipid-depleted cells surrounded by lipid-enriched intercellular spaces. In contrast, intracellular lipid droplets, normally not present in the epidermis of terrestrial mammals, are prominent in avian and marine mammal epidermis (cetaceans, manatees). We compared the transepidermal water loss, ultrastructure, and lipid biochemistry of the viable epidermis and stratum corneum of pigeon apterium, fledgling (featherless) zebra finches, painted storks, cetaceans, and manatees to those of humans and mice. Marine mammals possess an even more extensive lamellar-body secretory system than do terrestrial mammals; and lamellar-body contents, as in terrestrials, are secreted into the stratum corneum interstices. In cetaceans, however, glycolipids, but not ceramides, persist into the stratum corneum; whereas in manatees, glycolipids are replaced by ceramides, as in terrestrial mammals. Acylglucosylceramides, thought to be critical for lamellar-body deposition and barrier function in terrestrial mammals, are present in manatees but virtually absent in cetaceans, a finding that indicates that they are not obligate constituents of lamellar-body-derived membrane structures. Moreover, cetaceans do not elaborate the very long-chain, saturated N-acyl fatty acids that abound in terrestrial mammalian acylglucosylceramides. Furthermore, cold-water marine mammals generate large, intracellular neutral lipid droplets not found in terrestrial and warm-water marine mammals; these lipid droplets persist into the stratum corneum, suggesting thermogenesis, flotation, and/or cryoprotectant functions. Avians generate distinctive multigranular bodies that may be secreted into the intercellular spaces under xerotic conditions, as in zebra fledglings; ordinarily, however, the internal lamellae and limiting membranes deteriorate, generating intracellular neutral lipid droplets. The sphingolipid composition of avian stratum corneum is intermediate between terrestrials and cetaceans (approximately equal to 50% glycolipids), with triglycerides present in abundance. In the midstratum corneum of avians, neutral lipid droplets are released into the interstices, forming a large extracellular, lipid-enriched compartment, surrounding wafer-thin corneocytes, with a paucity of both lipid and keratin ("plates-and-mortar" rather than the "bricks-and-mortar" of mammals).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在陆生哺乳动物中,角质层脂质有两个来源:板层小体脂质沉积于角质层间隙,以及皮脂腺脂质排泄到皮肤表面,从而形成一个双室(“砖与灰浆”)系统,即脂质匮乏的细胞被富含脂质的细胞间隙所包围。相比之下,细胞内脂质小滴在陆生哺乳动物的表皮中通常不存在,但在鸟类和海洋哺乳动物(鲸类、海牛)的表皮中很突出。我们比较了鸽的裸皮、雏鸟(无毛)斑胸草雀、彩鹳、鲸类和海牛的活表皮及角质层的经表皮水分流失、超微结构和脂质生物化学,与人类和小鼠的进行对比。海洋哺乳动物拥有比陆生哺乳动物更广泛的板层小体分泌系统;并且和陆生动物一样,板层小体的内容物分泌到角质层间隙中。然而,在鲸类中,糖脂而非神经酰胺会持续存在于角质层;而在海牛中,糖脂被神经酰胺取代,这与陆生哺乳动物的情况相同。酰基葡萄糖神经酰胺被认为对陆生哺乳动物的板层小体沉积和屏障功能至关重要,它存在于海牛中,但在鲸类中几乎不存在,这一发现表明它们并非板层小体衍生膜结构的必需成分。此外,鲸类不会合成陆生哺乳动物酰基葡萄糖神经酰胺中大量存在的极长链饱和N - 酰基脂肪酸。此外,冷水海洋哺乳动物会产生大型细胞内中性脂质小滴,这在陆生和温水海洋哺乳动物中未被发现;这些脂质小滴会持续存在于角质层中,提示其具有产热、漂浮和/或防冻功能。鸟类会产生独特的多颗粒体,在干燥条件下可能会分泌到细胞间隙中,如斑胸雏鸟;然而通常情况下,内部板层和限制膜会退化,产生细胞内中性脂质小滴。鸟类角质层的鞘脂组成介于陆生动物和鲸类之间(约50%为糖脂),其中甘油三酯含量丰富。在鸟类角质层中层,中性脂质小滴释放到间隙中,形成一个大的细胞外富含脂质的隔室,围绕着极薄的角质形成细胞,脂质和角蛋白都很少(“板与灰浆”而非哺乳动物的“砖与灰浆”)。(摘要截选至400字)