Galactosylceramide (GalCer) is a neutral monoglycosylceramide, also known as galactocerebroside. It is distinguished from glucosylceramide by its β-galactose headgroup linked to ceramide, making it the predominant cerebroside in vertebrate myelin, where it constitutes up to 20% of total lipids.
Role in Myelin and Glycosphingolipid Function
Unlike the ubiquitous glucosylceramide (GlcCer), which mainly serves as a glycosphingolipid precursor, GalCer plays highly tissue-specific roles. Its axial galactose epimer enforces unique myelin compaction and insulation, extending glycosphingolipid simplicity with specialized functions beyond neural raft organization.
Molecular Structure
GalCer consists of ceramide (d18:1 Δ4-trans sphingosine N-acylated with fatty acids ranging from C16:0 to C24:1, often containing 2-hydroxy very-long-chain fatty acids in myelin). Its defining feature is the β-D-galactose headgroup linked as β1-1'Cer.
Common molecular species include d18:1/16:0 (MW ~700 g/mol), d18:1/18:0 (728 g/mol), and d18:1/24:1, which is particularly enriched in brain tissue. The compact equatorial headgroup (~50 Ų) and rigid hydrogen-bonding network differentiate GalCer from GlcCer and enable tandem MS² discrimination via characteristic glycosidic fragments.

