Biosynthesis of Cholesterol, Steroids, and Isoprenoids:- Cholesterol Has Several Fates
المؤلف:
David L. Nelson، Michael M. Cox
المصدر:
Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry
الجزء والصفحة:
820
2026-07-05
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Biosynthesis of Cholesterol, Steroids, and Isoprenoids:- Cholesterol Has Several Fates
Much of the cholesterol synthesis in vertebrates takes place in the liver. A small fraction of the cholesterol made there is incorporated into the membranes of hepatocytes, but most of it is exported in one of three forms: biliary cholesterol, bile acids, or cholesteryl esters. Bile acids and their salts are relatively hydrophilic cholesterol derivatives that are synthesized in the liver and aid in lipid digestion . Cholesteryl esters are formed in the liver through the action of acyl-CoA–cholesterol acyl transferase (ACAT). This enzyme catalyzes the transfer of a fatty acid from coenzyme A to the hydroxyl group of cholesterol (Fig. 1), converting the cholesterol to a more hydrophobic form. Cholesteryl esters are transported in secreted lipoprotein particles to other tissues that use cholesterol, or they are stored in the liver. All growing animal tissues need cholesterol for membrane synthesis, and some organs (adrenal gland and gonads, for example) use cholesterol as a precursor for steroid hormone production (discussed below). Cholesterol is also a precursor of vitamin D .

FIGURE 1 Synthesis of cholesteryl esters. Esterification con verts cholesterol to an even more hydrophobic form for storage and transport.
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