Abstract

25-Hydroxycholesterol, 20 alpha-hydroxycholesterol, 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol, and 5 alpha-hydroxy-6-ketocholestanol, when added to cultures of human lymphocytes in lipoprotein-depleted medium (LPDM) at a concentration of 2.5 x 10(-6) M, inhibit E-rosette formation with sheep red blood cells. 20 alpha-Hydroxycholesterol, 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol, and 5 alpha-hydroxy-6-ketocholestanol are more potent inhibitors than 25-hydroxycholesterol. The inhibitory effect of 5 alpha-hydroxy-6-ketocholestanol on E-rosette formation appears after 15 min of exposure; with the other three compounds, an exposure time of 18 hr is necessary. The inhibitory effect of E-rosette formation can be abolished by addition of free cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein, or high-density lipoprotein to the LPDM or by incubation of the cells in normal AB serum, but not by the addition of mevalonic acid to the LPDM. These observations suggest that the capacity of oxygenated sterol compounds (OSC) to inhibit E-rosette formation is independent of their inhibitory effect on sterol synthesis. It is possible that OSC inhibit E-rosette formation as a consequence of their insertion into the lymphocyte membrane as cholesterol analogues.

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