Cerebrosides represent the simplest neutral glycosphingolipids, consisting of a ceramide backbone glycosidically linked to a single hexose sugar—either β-glucose (glucocerebrosides) or β-galactose (galactocerebrosides). They serve as foundational precursors to more complex glycosphingolipids such as lactosylceramides and gangliosides. Abundant in neural tissues (up to 15% of myelin lipids) and fungal cell walls, their minimalistic structure supports critical functions in membrane insulation, myelin stability, and cellular signaling.
Molecular Structure
Cerebrosides feature N-acylsphingosine (typically a d18:1 base linked to C16:0–C24:0/24:1 fatty acyl chains, often 2-hydroxy in myelin) bearing a β-hexose unit (Glcβ1-1'Cer or Galβ1-1'Cer). Galactocerebrosides predominate in oligodendrocyte myelin, whereas glucocerebrosides are more broadly distributed across tissues. Their rigid ceramide hydrogen bonding (trans-Δ4, amide NH/3-OH) combined with sugar hydroxyl interactions produces cylindrical packing with a headgroup area of approximately 50 Ų. Psychosine (free glycosphingosine) is associated with cellular toxicity.
Biophysical Properties
Cerebrosides exhibit high melting temperatures, with GalCer ranging from 60–90°C compared to GlcCer at approximately 50°C, enforcing gel-phase rigidity within membrane microdomains. Cholesterol and sphingomyelin synergize with cerebrosides to promote liquid-ordered (Lo) raft domains. Interdigitating very-long acyl chains (e.g., C24:1) increase bilayer thickness up to ~60 Å and contribute to lamellar stacking, supporting myelin membrane compaction.




