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1.
Cholesterol is a prominent modulator of the integrity and functional activity of physiological membranes and the most abundant sterol in the mammalian brain. DHCR24-knock-out mice lack cholesterol and accumulate desmosterol with age. Here we demonstrate that brain cholesterol deficiency in 3-week-old DHCR24−/− mice was associated with altered membrane composition including disrupted detergent-resistant membrane domain (DRM) structure. Furthermore, membrane-related functions differed extensively in the brains of these mice, resulting in lower plasmin activity, decreased β-secretase activity and diminished Aβ generation. Age-dependent accumulation and integration of desmosterol in brain membranes of 16-week-old DHCR24−/− mice led to the formation of desmosterol-containing DRMs and rescued the observed membrane-related functional deficits. Our data provide evidence that an alternate sterol, desmosterol, can facilitate processes that are normally cholesterol-dependent including formation of DRMs from mouse brain extracts, membrane receptor ligand binding and activation, and regulation of membrane protein proteolytic activity. These data indicate that desmosterol can replace cholesterol in membrane-related functions in the DHCR24−/− mouse. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

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DHCR24 encodes 3β-hydroxysterol-Δ24-reductase (DHCR24) catalyzing the cholesterol synthesis from desmosterol using the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) as a co-factor. It is generally accepted that U18666a inhibits the reductase activity of DHCR24, but the detailed mechanism remains elusive. To explore the mechanism of the inhibitory effect of U18666a on DHCR24, we performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of two complexes including complexes of DHCR24-FAD-desmosterol enzymatic reactive components with and without the inhibitor U18666a. We found that the U18666a bound into the hydrophobic package near the FAD package of DHCR24. Furthermore, binding free energy of DHCR24 and desmosterol without U18666a is ?54.86 kcal/mol, while the system with U18666a is ?62.23 kcal/mol, suggesting that the affinity of the substrate desmosterol to DHCR24 was increased in response to the U18666a. In addition, U18666a interacts with FAD by newly forming three hydrogen bonds with Lys292, Lys367, and Gly438 of DHCR24. Finally, secondary structural analysis data obtained from the surrounding hot spots showed that U18666a induced dramatic secondary structural changes around the key residues in the interaction of DHCR24, FAD, and desmosterol. Taken together, these results for the first time demonstrate at the molecular structure level that U18666a blocks DHCR24 activity through an allosteric inhibiting mechanism, which may provide new insight into the development of a new type of cholesterol-lowering drug targeting to block the activity of DHCR24.  相似文献   

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Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) required cholesterol or desmosterol for virion-induced membrane fusion. HSV successfully entered DHCR24−/− cells, which lack a desmosterol-to-cholesterol conversion enzyme, indicating that entry can occur independently of cholesterol. Depletion of desmosterol from these cells resulted in diminished HSV-1 entry, suggesting a general sterol requirement for HSV-1 entry and that desmosterol can operate in virus entry. Cholesterol functioned more effectively than desmosterol, suggesting that the hydrocarbon tail of cholesterol influences viral entry.  相似文献   

7.
Desmosterolosis is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by multiple congenital anomalies. Patients with desmosterolosis have elevated levels of the cholesterol precursor desmosterol, in plasma, tissue, and cultured cells; this abnormality suggests a deficiency of the enzyme 3beta-hydroxysterol Delta24-reductase (DHCR24), which, in cholesterol biosynthesis, catalyzes the reduction of the Delta24 double bond of sterol intermediates. We identified the human DHCR24 cDNA, by the similarity between the encoded protein and a recently characterized plant enzyme--DWF1/DIM, from Arabidopsis thaliana--catalyzing a different but partially similar reaction in steroid/sterol biosynthesis in plants. Heterologous expression, in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, of the DHCR24 cDNA, followed by enzyme-activity measurements, confirmed that it encodes DHCR24. The encoded DHCR24 protein has a calculated molecular weight of 60.1 kD, contains a potential N-terminal secretory-signal sequence as well as at least one putative transmembrane helix, and is a member of a recently defined family of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-dependent oxidoreductases. Conversion of desmosterol to cholesterol by DHCR24 in vitro is strictly dependent on reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate and is increased twofold by the addition of FAD to the assay. The corresponding gene, DHCR24, was identified by database searching, spans approximately 46.4 kb, is localized to chromosome 1p31.1-p33, and comprises nine exons and eight introns. Sequence analysis of DHCR24 in two patients with desmosterolosis revealed four different missense mutations, which were shown, by functional expression, in yeast, of the patient alleles, to be disease causing. Our data demonstrate that desmosterolosis is a cholesterol-biosynthesis disorder caused by mutations in DHCR24.  相似文献   

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Pedretti A  Bocci E  Maggi R  Vistoli G 《Steroids》2008,73(7):708-719
Recent biochemical and clinical evidences unveiled that DHCR24 enzyme (3-beta-hydoxysterol-Delta(24)-reductase, also named seladin-1), which catalyzes the last step of the cholesterol biosynthesis, is implicated in relevant neuroprotective processes by modulating the level of cholesterol in membrane. The present study was undertaken with a view to model the DHCR24 enzyme and its catalytic site, analyzing the substrate recognition at an atomic level. A homology model of the enzyme was obtained based on plant Cytokinin Dehydrogenase, and its active site was found to bind the desmosterol plus a set of post-squalenic intermediates of the cholesterol biosynthesis in a binding mode conducive to catalysis, even if the docking results suggested that the enzyme has a clear preference for the last intermediates of such biosynthetic pathway. Since DHCR24 possesses a putative transmembrane segment, the enzyme was, then, inserted in a suitable membrane model and the membrane-anchored structure in complex with desmosterol and cholesterol underwent 10ns MD simulations. Such simulations evidenced a clearly different behavior between substrate and product since the product only completely leaves the catalytic cavity whereas desmosterol firmly conserves its pivotal interactions during all simulation time. This is one of the first reports documenting the enzymatic product egress using simple MD simulations in which all atoms are free to move.  相似文献   

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Larvae of Manduca sexta were used to obtain a cell-free sterol 24,25-reductase. From the midgut of fifth instar larvae fed a mixture of sitosterol and campesterol a microsome-bound 24,25-sterol reductase was prepared that transformed desmosterol (Km, 3 μM), lanosterol (Km, 18 μM), and cycloartenol (Km, 33 μM), to cholesterol, 24,25-dihydrolanosterol, and cycloartanol, respectively. With desmosterol as substrate, the microsome-bound enzyme was found to incorporate tritium into cholesterol from 4S-tritium labelled NADPH. [24-2H]lanosterol was transformed by larvae to [24-2H]24,25-dihydrolanosterol (structure confirmed by mass spectroscopy (MS) and 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. A rationally designed inhibitor of 24,25-reductase activity, 24(R,S),25-epimino-lanosterol (IL), was assayed and found to be inhibitory with an I50 of 2 μM. IL was supplemented in the diet of M. sexta with either sitosterol or stigmasterol and found to inhibit development (I50 60 ppm). The major sterol which accumulated in the IL-treated larvae was desmosterol, confirming the site of inhibition was reduction of the 24,25-bond. IL was converted to [2-3H]IL when fed to the larvae. [2-3H]lanosterol was recovered from fifth instar larvae and its structure confirmed by MS and radiochemical techniques. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS; also known as "RSH syndrome" [MIM 270400]) is an autosomal recessive multiple malformation syndrome due to a defect in cholesterol biosynthesis. Children with SLOS have elevated serum 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) levels and typically have low serum cholesterol levels. On the basis of this biochemical abnormality, it has been proposed that mutations in the human sterol Delta7-reductase (7-DHC reductase; E.C.1.3.1.21) gene cause SLOS. However, one could also propose a defect in a gene that encodes a protein necessary for either the expression or normal function of sterol Delta7-reductase. We cloned cDNA encoding a human sterol Delta7-reductase (DHCR7) on the basis of its homology with the sterol Delta7-reductase from Arabidopsis thaliana, and we confirmed the enzymatic function of the human gene product by expression in SLOS fibroblasts. SLOS fibroblasts transfected with human sterol Delta7-reductase cDNA showed a significant reduction in 7-DHC levels, compared with those in SLOS fibroblasts transfected with the vector alone. Using radiation-hybrid mapping, we show that the DHCR7 gene is encoded at chromosome 11q12-13. To establish that defects in this gene cause SLOS, we sequenced cDNA clones from SLOS patients. In three unrelated patients we have identified four different mutant alleles. Our results demonstrate both that the cDNA that we have identified encodes the human sterol Delta7-reductase and that mutations in DHCR7 are responsible for at least some cases of SLOS.  相似文献   

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The Oomycete Saprolegnia ferax incorporates 3H from both cycloartenol-[2-3H] and lanosterol-[2-3H] into its normal sterols cholesterol, fucosterol, desmosterol, and 24-methylenecholesterol. It is concluded that sterol biosynthesis in this organism is via cycloartenol and the taxonomic implications are discussed.  相似文献   

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The structurally related fungicides, tridemorph, fenpropimorph and fenpropidin have been shown to inhibit the sterol Δ14-reductase and Δ8→Δ7-isomerase during ergosterol biosynthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Ustilago maydis. However, although the three fungicides are able to inhibit both enzymes, tridemorph inhibits the Δ87-isomerase better than the Δ14-reductase whilst the reverse is true for fenpropidin and to a lesser extent for fenpropimorph.  相似文献   

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Using 3β-hydroxychol-5-en-24-oic acid (4) as starting material, the diastereoisomeric allylic alcohols (24E)-26-hydroxydesmosterol (2) and (24Z)-26-hydroxydesmosterol (3) have been synthesised in six steps with 67% and 12% overall yield, respectively. Both of these isomers are found in newborn mouse brain where sterol synthesis is high. Unlike desmosterol (1), neither of these isomers is a ligand to the liver x receptors and thus represents a novel biological deactivation mechanism avoiding cholesterol synthesis.  相似文献   

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Abstract

Existing evidence has demonstrated liposomes as the gene transporter induce the cytotoxicity during the transfection process through several known pathways. In the present study, we investigated the possibility of siRNAs targeting 3-β-hydroxysterol △-24-reductase (DHCR24), which encodes an enzyme catalyzing the last step of cholesterol biosynthesis, to suppress the liposome cytotoxicity induced by lipid-based transfection reagent in the neuroblastoma cell line N2A. We found that the siRNAs targeting DHCR24 mRNA protect cells from the liposome-induced cell death, probably through the effect of siDHCR24s on the reduction of the cellular cholesterol and decrease in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). This suggests that siRNAs targeting DHCR24 or other methods that reduce the intracellular cholesterol levels might be a good strategy for avoiding the cytotoxicity of liposomes, without impairing its efficiency of gene-delivering.  相似文献   

18.
Cholesterol is essential to human health, and its levels are tightly regulated by a balance of synthesis, uptake, and efflux. Cholesterol synthesis requires the actions of more than twenty enzymes to reach the final product, through two alternate pathways. Here we describe a physical and functional interaction between the two terminal enzymes. 24-Dehydrocholesterol reductase (DHCR24) and 7-dehydrocholesterol reductase (DHCR7) coimmunoprecipitate, and when the DHCR24 gene is knocked down by siRNA, DHCR7 activity is also ablated. Conversely, overexpression of DHCR24 enhances DHCR7 activity, but only when a functional form of DHCR24 is used. DHCR7 is important for both cholesterol and vitamin D synthesis, and we have identified a novel layer of regulation, whereby its activity is controlled by DHCR24. This suggests the existence of a cholesterol “metabolon”, where enzymes from the same metabolic pathway interact with each other to provide a substrate channeling benefit. We predict that other enzymes in cholesterol synthesis may similarly interact, and this should be explored in future studies.  相似文献   

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Free sterol fractions were isolated from the marine sponges Phyllospongia madagascarensis, Scalarispongia sp., Oceanapia sp., Monanchora clathrata and studied by GLC, GLC–MS, and spectroscopy NMR. P. madagascarensis and Scalarispongia sp. contained common Δ5-sterols; cholesterol was shown to be a main sterol of both the sponges. Oceanapia sp. contained stanols and minor Δ5-sterols with 24R-24,25-methylene-5α-cholestan-3β-ol as a main constituent. Many free sterols from M. clathrata were Δ7-series compounds, and latosterol was a main sterol. Δ4-3-Ketosteroids and Δ5-sterol esters were found in the Antarctic sponge Haliclona sp., but free sterols were practically absent except for trace amount of cholesterol. A chemotaxonomic application of sterols in relation to the genera Phyllospongia, Oceanapia and the family Crambeidae is provided. The known cases of the absence of sterols in sponges and probable reasons of the phenomenon are discussed.  相似文献   

20.

Background

Targeted disruption of the murine 3β-hydroxysterol-Δ7-reductase gene (Dhcr7), an animal model of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome, leads to loss of cholesterol synthesis and neonatal death that can be partially rescued by transgenic replacement of DHCR7 expression in brain during embryogenesis. To gain further insight into the role of non-brain tissue cholesterol deficiency in the pathophysiology, we tested whether the lethal phenotype could be abrogated by selective transgenic complementation with DHCR7 expression in the liver.

Results

We generated mice that carried a liver-specific human DHCR7 transgene whose expression was driven by the human apolipoprotein E (ApoE) promoter and its associated liver-specific enhancer. These mice were then crossed with Dhcr7+/- mutants to generate Dhcr7-/- mice bearing a human DHCR7 transgene. Robust hepatic transgene expression resulted in significant improvement of cholesterol homeostasis with cholesterol concentrations increasing to 80~90 % of normal levels in liver and lung. Significantly, cholesterol deficiency in brain was not altered. Although late gestational lung sacculation defect reported previously was significantly improved, there was no parallel increase in postnatal survival in the transgenic mutant mice.

Conclusion

The reconstitution of DHCR7 function selectively in liver induced a significant improvement of cholesterol homeostasis in non-brain tissues, but failed to rescue the neonatal lethality of Dhcr7 null mice. These results provided further evidence that CNS defects caused by Dhcr7 null likely play a major role in the lethal pathogenesis of Dhcr7 -/- mice, with the peripheral organs contributing the morbidity.  相似文献   

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