behavior/neurological
• food intake is slightly higher than in wild-type mice
• however, no differences in body weight are seen
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cellular
• keratinocytes exhibit enhanced proliferation
• however, mice do not exhibit hyperkeratosis
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• expression of oxidative stress-induced genes is increased in keratinocytes
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homeostasis/metabolism
• deuterium-sphingoinse is only slightly metabolized to phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) in keratinocytes, with PC and PE levels being 17.9 and 6.9% of those in wild-type cells and instead plasmanyl/plasmenylcholine and plasmanyl/plasmenylethanolamine levels are increased 10.4- and 22.2-fold, respectively
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• fatty aldehyde dehydrogenase (FALDH) activity toward long-chain aldehydes in the liver, kidney, and retina is less than 10% of that in wild-type mice while in the brain, small intestine, testis, spleen, and dermis, it is 30-50% of that in wild-type mice
• FALDH activity toward C8:0 aldehyde is reduced 50-66% compared with wild-type activity
• primary keratinocytes show extremely low (5% of wild-type) FALDH activity towards the C16:0 aldehyde, however differentiated keratinocytes show 59.5% of wild-type activity
• however, FALDH activity toward long-chain aldehydes in the cornea, lung, and epidermis is similar to wild-type mice
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• metabolism of long-chain bases to ester-linked glycerolipids is severely impaired
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integument
• intercellular spaces between keratinocytes are broadened in the stratum basale
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• small, intracellular vacuoles are seen in the stratum granulosum
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• small, intracellular vacuoles are seen in the stratum spinosum
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• mice exhibit delayed skin barrier recovery after acetone treatment to perturb the stratum corneum
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• keratinocytes show altered metabolism of dihydrosphingosine to glycerolipids, however metabolism of dihydrosphingosine to sphingolipids is normal
• the amounts of fatty acid released from glycerolipids in keratinocytes is lower than in wild-type keratinocytes
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• keratinocytes exhibit enhanced proliferation
• however, mice do not exhibit hyperkeratosis
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