Abstract
Patients with the autosomal recessive disorder Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLO) have recently been shown to have markedly increased tissue levels of certain cholesterol biosynthesis intermediates, most notably 7-dehydrocholesterol. The findings strongly suggest a block in the step that catalyses reduction of 7-dehydrocholesterol to cholesterol. The accumulation of 7-dehydrocholesterol can generally easily be detected in serum by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. However, it could not be totally ruled out that SLO patients with less severe enzyme defects could escape detection by this method. A more direct way of diagnosing a defect in 7-dehydrocholesterol reduction would be to assay the conversion of 7-dehydrocholesterol to cholesterol in cultured fibroblasts from patients with suspected SLO. In the present work, an assay for the conversion of [3H]lathosterol to [3H]-cholesterol in cultured human fibroblasts is described. Lathosterol is the immediate precursor of 7-dehydrocholesterol in the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway and was chosen for the assay instead of 7-dehydrocholesterol owing to the difficulty in preparation and handling of the latter compound. Fibroblasts from control subjects converted [3H]lathosterol to [3H]cholesterol efficiently, whereas in fibroblasts from SLO patients the conversion did not go beyond 7-dehydrocholesterol. It is concluded that the present method is useful for the diagnosis of SLO.