Journal of Lipid Research (May 1971)
Biosynthesis of squalene and sterols by rat aorta
Abstract
The synthesis of nonsaponifiable compounds from radioactive mevalonate by segments of adult rat aorta was studied in vitro. The labeled products consisted largely of substances with the chromatographic and chemical behavior of squalene, lanosterol, lathosterol, and cholesterol. Even after 3 or 4 hr of incubation, the incorporation of mevalonate into squalene was higher than its incorporation into C27 sterols; cholesterol contained less than 20% of the radioactivity in the total sterols. Lanosterol was the most highly labeled sterol. The level of radioactivity in lathosterol was comparable to the level in cholesterol. Small amounts of radioactivity were found in other sterols. Material with the same mobility on TLC as 7-dehydrocholesterol had less radioactivity than cholesterol, but more than sterols with the mobility of desmosterol. The results of measurements made after short periods of incubation showed that squalene and lanosterol became labeled before the other nonsaponifiable compounds.