Abstract: | Prior studies have suggested that sex hormones could influence the ganglioside and/or neutral glycosphingolipid composition of various organs. To date, the effects of sex hormones on the glycosphingolipid composition of the rat small intestinal mucosa, however, have not been examined. In the present studies, male albino rats of the Sherman strain were subcutaneously administered the synthetic estrogen, ethinylestradiol (5 mg/kg body wt. per day), or diluent for 5 days, and the ganglioside, neutral glycosphingolipid and ceramide composition of the small intestinal mucosa of these animals were analyzed and compared. The results of these experiments demonstrate that estrogen administration: increased the ganglioside concentration of this tissue, including hematoside (Gm3); increased the percentage of the long-chain base phytosphingosine of hematoside; and did not appear to significantly influence the concentration or composition of the neutral glycosphingolipids or ceramide in this tissue. These data, therefore, indicate that estrogen administration induces quantitative and qualitative alterations in the gangliosides but not in the neutral glycosphingolipids or ceramide of rat small intestinal mucosa. |