gamma-sitosterol and 7-dehydrocholesterol

gamma-sitosterol has been researched along with 7-dehydrocholesterol* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for gamma-sitosterol and 7-dehydrocholesterol

ArticleYear
Elevated cholesterol precursors other than cholestanol can also be a hallmark for CTX.
    Journal of inherited metabolic disease, 2008, Volume: 31 Suppl 2

    Cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis (CTX) is an inborn error of bile acid synthesis in which hepatic conversion of cholesterol to cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids is impaired. Patients have abnormal bile alcohols in urine, normal to increased plasma cholesterol concentrations and increased concentrations of plasma cholestanol. Little is known about cholesterol precursors in CTX, however. We studied cholesterol and phytosterol profiles in two siblings with CTX during follow-up. While cholesterol concentrations were low in both patients, plasma cholestanol was 6-fold higher compared to control values. In addition, both siblings had a more than 100-fold increase in 7-dehydrocholesterol (7DHC) and 8-dehydrocholesterol (8DHC). Lathosterol, lanosterol and sitosterol were increased in both patients while concentrations of desmosterol and campesterol were normal. In addition, plasma lathosterol/cholesterol ratios were significantly elevated. After treatment with chenodeoxycholate, both patients showed a marked decrease in cholestanol, 7DHC, 8DHC, lathosterol, lanosterol and sitosterol. In addition, the lathosterol/cholesterol ratio normalized, indicating that overall cholesterol synthesis was sufficiently suppressed. This study shows that elevated cholesterol precursors, other than cholestanol, can be a hallmark for CTX.

    Topics: Biomarkers; Chenodeoxycholic Acid; Child; Child, Preschool; Cholestadienols; Cholestanol; Cholesterol; Dehydrocholesterols; Humans; Lanosterol; Male; Predictive Value of Tests; Sitosterols; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; Up-Regulation; Xanthomatosis, Cerebrotendinous

2008
Fatty acid steryl, stanyl, and steroid esters by esterification and transesterification in vacuo using Candida rugosa lipase as catalyst.
    Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 2001, Volume: 49, Issue:1

    Sterols (sitosterol, cholesterol, stigmasterol, ergosterol, and 7-dehydrocholesterol) and sitostanol have been converted in high to near-quantitative yields to the corresponding long-chain acyl esters via esterification with fatty acids or transesterification with methyl esters of fatty acids or triacylglycerols using lipase from Candida rugosa as biocatalyst in vacuo (20-40 mbar) at 40 degrees C. Neither organic solvent nor water is added in these reactions. Under similar conditions, cholesterol has been converted to cholesteryl butyrate and steroids (5alpha-pregnan-3beta-ol-20-one or 5-pregnen-3beta-ol-20-one) have been converted to their propionic acid esters, both in moderate to high yields, via transesterification with tributyrin and tripropionin, respectively. Reaction parameters studied in esterification include the temperature and the molar ratio of the substrates as well as the amount and reuse properties of the C. rugosa lipase. Lipases from porcine pancreas, Rhizopus arrhizus, and Chromobacterium viscosum are quite ineffective as biocatalysts for the esterification of cholesterol with oleic acid under the above conditions.

    Topics: Candida; Catalysis; Cholesterol; Dehydrocholesterols; Ergosterol; Esterification; Fatty Acids; Kinetics; Lipase; Sitosterols; Sterols; Stigmasterol; Substrate Specificity; Triglycerides; Vacuum

2001
Effects of steroid molecules on the dynamical structure of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and digalactosyldiacylglycerol bilayers.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 1990, Feb-28, Volume: 1022, Issue:2

    The ESR spectra of cholestane spin labels (CSL) in dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) bilayers containing 20 wt% of cholesterol, 7-dehydrocholesterol, beta-sitosterol, stigmasterol and lanosterol exhibit a marked similarity, thus indicating that these steroids induced the same effects on the lipid bilayer over the temperature range 21-55 degrees C. The incorporation of these steroids into the DOPC bilayers enhances the orientational order of the CSL molecules at every temperature studied, but only induces a pronounced slow-down in their rotational motions at temperatures above 35 degrees C. Similar results were obtained in DOPC/ergosterol multilamellar liposomes, but the changes are now less pronounced than in the other five DOPC/steroid systems. In contrast, the addition of stigmasterol to digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) bilayers appears to increase the order parameter mean value of P2, without affecting the diffusion coefficients. Furthermore, the incorporation of 7-dehydrocholesterol to DGDG bilayers causes a large enhancement in the orientational order, but has only a small effect on D perpendicular of the CSL molecules. Importantly, this latter effect appears to be independent of temperature. The marked changes in the rates of the rotational motion brought about by the addition of steroids, contrasts with the lack of a significant effect of unsaturation on the bilayer dynamics reported by us previously (Korstanje et al. (1989), Biochim. Biophys. Acta 980, 225-233, and 982, 196-204).

    Topics: Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry, Physical; Cholestanes; Cholesterol; Dehydrocholesterols; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Galactolipids; Glycolipids; Lanosterol; Lipid Bilayers; Liposomes; Phosphatidylcholines; Sitosterols; Spin Labels; Steroids; Stigmasterol; Structure-Activity Relationship; Temperature

1990