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  2. Sterol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterol

    Sterols and related compounds play essential roles in the physiology of eukaryotic organisms, and are essential for normal physiology of plants, animals, and fungi. [4] For example, cholesterol forms part of the cellular membrane in animals, where it affects the cell membrane's fluidity and serves as secondary messenger in developmental signaling.

  3. Ergosterol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergosterol

    Ergosterol (ergosta-5,7,22-trien-3β-ol) is a sterol found in fungi, and named after ergot, the common name of members of the fungal genus Claviceps from which ergosterol was first isolated. Ergosterol is a component of yeast and other fungal cell membranes, serving many of the same functions that cholesterol serves in animal cells. [1]

  4. Oxysterol-binding protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxysterol-binding_protein

    This functions include signaling, vesicular trafficking, lipid metabolism and nonvesicular sterol transport. [12] ORPs have been studied in many organisms cells as human cells or yeast. In yeast, where organelle membranes are closely apposed it has been proposed that ORPs work as sterol transporters, though only a few ORPs actually bind sterols ...

  5. Stigmasterol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stigmasterol

    Stigmasterol is a food additive in manufactured food products in the United Kingdom and European Union. [7]It was introduced as a precursor by Percy Lavon Julian for industrial large-scale manufacture of semisynthetic progesterone, [8] [9] [10] a valuable human hormone that plays an important physiological role in the regulatory and tissue rebuilding mechanisms related to estrogen effects, as ...

  6. Sterolin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterolin

    The molecular mechanisms regulating the absorption of dietary sterols in the body are poorly understood, and as sitosterolemia is a rare autosomal recessively inherited lipid metabolic disorder characterized by hyperabsorption and decreased biliary excretion of dietary sterols, studies have focused on the molecular basis of sitosterolemia to shed light on important principles concerning ...

  7. Sterol carrier protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterol_carrier_protein

    Sterol carrier proteins (also known as nonspecific lipid transfer proteins) is a family of proteins that transfer steroids and probably also phospholipids and gangliosides between cellular membranes. These proteins are different from plant nonspecific lipid transfer proteins but structurally similar to small proteins of unknown function from ...

  8. Squalene monooxygenase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squalene_monooxygenase

    Squalene monooxygenase (also called squalene epoxidase) is a eukaryotic enzyme that uses NADPH and diatomic oxygen to oxidize squalene to 2,3-oxidosqualene (squalene epoxide). ). Squalene epoxidase catalyzes the first oxygenation step in sterol biosynthesis and is thought to be one of the rate-limiting enzymes in this pathwa

  9. Δ7-sterol 5(6)-desaturase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Δ7-sterol_5(6)-desaturase

    In enzymology, a Δ 7-sterol 5(6)-desaturase (EC 1.14.19.20) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction. Δ 7-sterol + 2 ferrocytochrome b 5 + O 2 + 2 H + = Δ 5,7-sterol + 2 ferricytochrome b 5 + 2 H 2 O. The four substrates of this enzyme are Δ 7-sterol, ferrocytochrome b 5, H +, and O 2. Its three products are Δ 5,7-sterol ...