Sterols synthesized by cultured trichomycetes |
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Authors: | Anne M. Starr Robert W. Lichtwardt James D. McChesney Ted A. Baer |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Botany, University of Kansas, 66045 Lawrence, KS, USA;(2) Department of Medicinal Chemistry, University of Kansas, 66045 Lawrence, KS, USA;(3) Present address: Zoecon Corporation, 975 California Ave., 94304 Palo Alto, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | Desmosterol was synthesized by all but 2 of 14 isolates of the fungal genus Smittium (Harpellales) obtained from the hindguts of various Diptera larvae and grown axenically on a sterol-free medium. Also detected in some isolates of Smittium were cholesterol and ergosterol, and another, unidentified sterol with an apparent molecular ion of 470. Sterol content based on dry weight of fungal tissue was as high as 0.34%, but it was shown in one isolate that sterols vary both quantitatively and qualitatively during growth of the fungus. Two axenic cultures of the trichomycete Amoebidium parasiticum (Amoebidiales) isolated from the exoskeleton of a Cladocera contained cholesterol and ergosterol, but no desmosterol. Two soil fungi with possible phylogenetic affinities to Smittium, Linderina pennispora and Dipsacomyces acuminosporus (Kickxellales), produced cholesterol alone. The possible influence of the gut fungi on arthropod growth and development is discussed.Abbreviations TMS trimethylsilylBased upon a Master of Arts thesis submitted by the senior author to the Department of Botany, University of Kansas. This research was partially supported by NSF grants BMS 72-02380-AO and DEB 77-16161 to R.W.L. |
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Keywords: | Sterols Fungi Insects Smittium Trichomycetes |
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