1993
DOI: 10.1006/abbi.1993.1100
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The Structural Requirements of Sterols for Membrane Function in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Cited by 107 publications
(72 citation statements)
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“…Whatever the origin of the effect there appears to be a difference in sensitivity between the ketosteroid reductases of different fungal species. Previous studies have indicated that the 14c~-methyl sterols preceeding this step, including eburicol, will not support growth [20] and this was consistent with our observations that a block to sterol biosynthesis was not associated with azole tolerance.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Whatever the origin of the effect there appears to be a difference in sensitivity between the ketosteroid reductases of different fungal species. Previous studies have indicated that the 14c~-methyl sterols preceeding this step, including eburicol, will not support growth [20] and this was consistent with our observations that a block to sterol biosynthesis was not associated with azole tolerance.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…SMY10 (an SMY8 derivative expressing A. thaliana cycloartenol synthase (19) from the integrated yeast expression vector pRS305GAL) converts biosynthetic oxidosqualene to cycloartenol. We found that SMY10 requires ergosterol, like other lanosterol synthase mutants producing endogenous cycloartenol (28) or grown on exogenous cycloartenol (29). This is consistent with previous studies that showed low (30) (50) is alkylation followed by demethylation to cycloeucalenol, which is isomerized to obtusifoliol.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…If cycloartenol were the only sterol accumulating in the SMY10 host, isomerase expression would not restore ergosterol prototrophy. Fortunately, yeast at least partially demethylates cycloartenol at the 4-position (29,33). The yeast demethylating enzymes Erg25, Erg26, and Erg27 (34 -36) that normally metabolize lanosterol apparently have sufficiently broad substrate specificity to accept its isomer cycloartenol.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Variation in the conformation properties of the nucleus can affect the tilt of C-3 hydroxyl group and tilt of the 17(20)-bond sterol side chain. The possibility of cycloartenol to be "bent" is no longer credible, rather the sterol is thought to assume a planar structure with the side chain to the right when the substrate is bound to SMT or functioning as a membrane insert [3,30,31]. The global substrate features recognized by the SMT and turnover numbers developed from the Michaelis complex and related properties, including subunit architecture (4 identical subunits with native molecular weights between 161 kDa to 172 kDa), pH dependence (centered at pH 7.5) and activation energies (ca.…”
Section: Pro-smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ∆ 5 -phytosterols often constitute < 80% of the total sterol fraction of cells and accumulate in the plasma membrane [2][3][4][5]. The addition of a 24-alkyl group to the C 8 side chain of cholesterol can allow the side chain to sweep out a larger cone in the bulk lipids of the membrane than the cone swept out by a C 8 isooctyl side chain thereby providing greater potential of phytosterols to disrupt lipid-lipid interactions which in turn can affect fluidity of the lipid leaflet.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%