Skin surface lipids of the dog |
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Authors: | Sharaf David M Clark Stanley J Downing Donald T |
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Affiliation: | (1) Departments of Dermatology and Biochemistry, Boston University Medical Center, 02118 Boston, MA |
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Abstract: | The skin surface lipid of the dog has been reported to contain a high proportion of diol diesters having a lower mobility
on thin layer chromatography than diesters from other species in spite of containing similar fatty acid and diol components.
In the present study, dog skin surface lipid was separated by preparative thin layer chromatography into sterol esters (42%),
wax diesters (32%), free sterols (9%), polar lipids (7%), and unidentified components (10%). The diesters contained 1,2-diols,
each esterified with one long chain fatty acid and one isovaleric acid moiety. The diols were principally branched chain C21 and C22 compounds while the long chain fatty acids esterified with them were mainly C20 and C21 branched compounds. The fatty acids from the sterol esters were mostly saturated, branched chain C19 to C23, together with 7% of straight chain monoenoic acids, principally C21 and C22. There were only trace amounts of free sterols other than cholesterol, while the esterified sterols contained 96% cholesterol
and 4% lathosterol. |
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