REVIEW: The Roles of Ceramide in the Regulation of Neuronal Growth and
Development
A. H. Futerman
Department of Membrane Research and Biophysics, Weizmann Institute of
Science, Rehovot, 76100, Israel; fax: 972-8-9344112; E-mail:
bmfuter@weizmann.weizmann.ac.il
Received August 15, 1997
Ceramide can be formed by the activity of two general metabolic
pathways, the anabolic pathway, in which ceramide is formed by
acylation of a sphingoid long chain base, and the catabolic pathway, in
which ceramide is formed by the degradation of either
glycosphingolipids or of sphingomyelin (SM). The anabolic reactions
take place in the early compartments of the secretory pathway (the
endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus) and the catabolic
reactions take place either in lysosomes or at the plasma membrane.
Work from our and other laboratories has shown that neuronal growth and
development can be regulated by manipulating ceramide metabolism. Thus,
synthesis of glucosylceramide from ceramide is required for axonal
growth in cultured hippocampal neurons, but the formation of ceramide
from SM, by a sphingomyelinase activity, stimulates the earliest stages
of development in these cells, namely the formation of minor neuronal
processes and the initial formation of the axon. Thus, ceramide and its
metabolites play distinct roles in the same neuron, depending on the
intracellular site of generation of ceramide and on the stage of
neuronal development.
KEY WORDS: ceramide, glucosylceramide, inhibition, stereoisomers,
neurons, neurotrophins, secretory pathway