Abstract

The rat liver microsomal enzyme that catalyzes NADPH-dependent reduction of 3-ketosteroid intermediates of cholesterol biosynthesis from lanosterol has been solubilized. Although the specific activity has been enhanced only modestly, 24-fold, the solubilized and partially purified reductase can be obtained free of 4-methyl sterol oxidase (also NAD(P)H dependent) and 4α-steroidoic acid decarboxylase (NAD dependent) that are the other two constitutive enzymes of microsomal sterol 4-demethylation. In addition, the isolated protein can be incorporated into artificial phospholipid membranes with retention of activity. Thus, the partially purified 3-ketosteroid reductase is suitable for reconstitution with other enzymes and electron carriers to achieve the 10-step oxidative removal of the 4- gem-dimethyl group of sterols. Both the solubilized and microsomalbound enzyme are essentially inactive with NADH. Also, similar sterol substrate specificities with 4α-monomethyl- and 4,4-dimethyl-3-ketosteroids, pH optima, and other properties of microsomal-bound and solubilized 3-ketoreductase are observed. As observed for other microsomal enzymes the K m of the solubilized enzyme is significantly lower than that of the membrane-bound enzyme. Membrane-bound 3-ketosteroid reductase is stimulated two- to- threefold by cytosolic Z protein (fatty acid binding protein), but stimulatory activity is lost after solubilization of the microsomal enzyme. Stimulation could not be restored by incorporating the partially purified reductase into an artificial membrane. Stimulation can be reversed by titration of Z-protein with either fatty acids or anti-Z-protein immunoglobulin. Thus, Z protein may modulate several microsomal enzymic activities of sterol biosynthesis in concert by exhibiting affinities for the membrane as well as low-molecular-weight cofactors, substrates, and metabolic effectors.

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