Cholesterol and its derivatives
- Related Topics:
- steroid
- isoprenoid
- prostaglandin
- lipoprotein
- phospholipid
Cholesterol may be the most intensely studied small molecule of biological origin. Not only are its complex biosynthetic pathway and the physiologically important products derived from it of scientific interest, but also the strong correlation in humans between high blood cholesterol levels and the incidence of heart attack and stroke (diseases that are leading causes of death worldwide) is of paramount medical importance. The study of this molecule and its biological origin have resulted in more than a dozen Nobel Prizes.
Cholesterol is a prominent member of a large class of lipids called isoprenoids that are widely distributed in nature. The class name derives from the fact that these molecules are formed by chemical condensation of a simple five-carbon molecule, isoprene. Isoprenoids encompass diverse biological molecules such as steroid hormones, sterols (cholesterol, ergosterol, and sitosterol), bile acids, the lipid-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K), phytol (a lipid component of the photosynthetic pigment chlorophyll), the insect juvenile hormones, plant hormones (gibberellins), and polyisoprene (the major component of natural rubber). Many other biologically important isoprenoids play more-subtle roles in biology.
Structure and properties
The sterols are major components of biological membranes in eukaryotes (organisms whose cells have a nucleus) but are rare in prokaryotes (cells without a nucleus, such as bacteria). Cholesterol is the principal sterol of animals, whereas the major sterol in fungi is ergosterol and that in plants is sitosterol. The characteristic feature of each of these three important molecules is four rigidly fused carbon rings forming the steroid nucleus and a hydroxyl (OH) group attached to the first ring. One molecule is distinguished from another by the positions of the carbon-carbon double bonds and by the structure of the hydrocarbon side chain on the fourth ring.
Cholesterol and its relatives are hydrophobic molecules with exceedingly low water solubility. The overall hydrophobicity is negligibly affected by the hydrophilic OH group. The structure of cholesterol is such that it does not form aggregates in water, although it does shoehorn between the molecules of biological membranes, with its OH group located at the water-membrane interface. The stiff fused ring structure of cholesterol adds rigidity to liquid-crystalline phospholipid bilayers and strengthens them against mechanical rupture. Cholesterol is thus an important component of the membrane surrounding a cell, where its concentration may rise as high as 50 percent by weight.
Biosynthesis
Cholesterol biosynthesis can be divided into four stages. The first stage generates a six-carbon compound called mevalonic acid from three two-carbon acetate units (derived from the oxidation of fuel molecules—e.g., glucose) in the form of acetyl-CoA, the same initial building block used to form biological fatty acids described in the section Fatty acids: Biosynthesis. In the second stage mevalonate is converted to a five-carbon molecule of isopentenyl pyrophosphate in a series of four reactions. The conversion of this product to a 30-carbon compound, squalene, in the third stage requires the condensation of six molecules of isopentenyl pyrophosphate. In the fourth stage the linear squalene molecule is formed into rings in a complex reaction sequence to give the 27-carbon cholesterol.
Biosynthetic derivatives
Two classes of important molecules, bile acids and steroid hormones, are derived from cholesterol in vertebrates. These derivatives are described below.
Bile acids
The bile acids and their salts are detergents that emulsify fats in the gut during digestion. They are synthesized from cholesterol in the liver by a series of reactions that introduce a hydroxyl group into ring B and ring C and shorten the acyl side chain of ring D to seven carbons with the terminal carbon changed to a carboxyl group. The resulting molecule, cholic acid—as well as chenodeoxycholic acid (a close relative lacking the OH on ring C)—are usually found in the form of their salts, in which the amino acids taurine and glycine are chemically linked to the side-chain carboxyl group. These detergents are secreted from the liver into the gall bladder, where they are stored before being released through the bile duct into the small intestine. After performing an emulsifying action that is essential in fat digestion (described in the section Fatty acids), they are reabsorbed in the lower small intestine, returned through the blood to the liver, and reused. This cyclic process, called the enterohepatic circulation, handles 20 to 30 grams of bile acids per day in human beings. The small fraction that escapes this circulation is lost in the feces. This is the major excretory route for cholesterol (though a smaller fraction is lost through the normal sloughing of dead skin cells).