Globosides are neutral glycosphingolipids of the globo-series, characterized by a ceramide backbone glycosidically linked to a tetrasaccharide headgroup (GalNAcβ1-3Galα1-4Galβ1-4Glcβ1-Cer, denoted Gb4 or GL4). They extend the glycosphingolipid hierarchy beyond cerebrosides and glucosyl-/galactosylceramides with branched, blood group-active glycans. Although rare in most tissues (0.1-1% of GSLs), they are enriched in erythrocytes (P antigen) and kidney. Globosides mediate microbial adhesion and complement regulation, contrasting sialylated gangliosides through their zwitterionic neutrality at physiological pH.
Molecular Structure
Globosides center on ceramide (d18:1 sphingosine N-acylated with C16:0-C24:1 fatty acids) bearing the conserved globo-H epitope core: β-Glc-(1→4)β-Gal-(1→4)α-Gal-(1→3)β-GalNAc. Gb3 (trisaccharide precursor: Galα1-4Galβ1-4Glcβ1-Cer) represents the minimal functional unit. Molecular weight is approximately 1354 g/mol for common d18:1/24:1 variants. The α-Gal branch introduces conformational rigidity, enabling specific antibody recognition (e.g., anti-Pk in the p phenotype).
Biophysical Properties
Cylindrical amphipathicity (head area ~70-80 Ų) facilitates integration into lipid rafts with sphingomyelin and cholesterol. Their neutral charge prevents electrostatic repulsion, allowing tight packing in Lo domains. Very long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) interdigitation stabilizes renal epithelia. Globosides are resistant to lysosomal degradation in the absence of specific activators.

