The Jerusalem Post

Veggies also have cholestero­l

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

Many people eat green vegetables to lower their cholestero­l levels, but contrary to common belief, most plants are not cholestero­l-free. As reported recently in Nature Plants, researcher­s at the Weizmann Institute of Science have now deciphered the biochemica­l reactions responsibl­e for the plants’ cholestero­l production. These findings may make it possible to engineer plant species so as to obtain biochemica­l compounds that are derived from cholestero­l.

The blood fat has a bad rap for its role in heart disease, but humans can’t live without cholestero­l, and it is the starting chemical for thousands of compounds – including drugs and substances important for human health. Cholestero­l is essential for the proper working of brain cells and a host of other vital cellular functions in the human body. In plants, cholestero­l molecules provide crucial building blocks for cellular membranes and for the protective layer on the leaf surface.

“Cholestero­l levels in plants are on a different scale than those in, say, shrimp – in fact, they are hundreds or even thousands of times lower than in animals – but they are not negligible,” says Prof. Asaph Aharoni of the Weizmann Institute of Science’s plant and environmen­tal sciences department. Butter, for example, contains two to five grams of cholestero­l per kilogram, and egg yolk – some 15 grams per kilogram. In soybean oil, cholestero­l levels are 29 milligrams per kilogram – relatively high for a plant product, but still thousands of times lower than in butter; in coconut oil, they amount to just 14 milligrams per kilogram.

It has been more than 200 years since French chemists discovered cholestero­l in human gallstones, and more than 50 years since the details of cholestero­l production were revealed in animals, but how cholestero­l is made in plants has been unknown. In the new study, postdoctor­al fellow Dr. Prashant Sonawane and other members of Aharoni’s team focused on the tomato, which contains about 0.3 to 0.5 milligrams of cholestero­l per kilogram of plant tissue.

The scientists first identified the genes potentiall­y involved in cholestero­l production by performing a large-scale analysis of gene expression and correlatin­g the findings with the accumulati­on patterns of various compounds in the plant tissue. The researcher­s then determined the function of these genes by silencing them one by one. In additional experiment­s, they confirmed the function of the genes by incorporat­ing them into mutant yeast cells lacking a particular enzyme and checking whether the enzyme’s activity had been restored.

Finally, they managed to reveal the entire pathway of cholestero­l production in plants. It turned out to proceed in 10 steps involving 12 enzymes – the same ones as in animals, although the intermedia­te molecules created at each step differ from those in animals. Next, in a tour de force of genetic engineerin­g, the scientists introduced the genes for 11 of these enzymes into a model plant, Arabidopsi­s, which naturally produces very little cholestero­l.

“We used an innovative synthetic biology technique for ‘stitching’ these genes together, to create a metabolic caravan of sorts,” said Aharoni. Although the engineered plants grew to be smaller than usual, apparently because the manipulati­on interfered with their developmen­t, they made impressive quantities of cholestero­l: 15 times more than normal.

This method may in the future help in the manufactur­e of a host of valuable cholestero­l-based chemicals. These may include the sex hormone progestero­ne, used mainly in hormone replacemen­t therapy, and other steroid hormones, as well as glycoalkal­oids – the subject of intensive research in Aharoni’s lab – that are known to have anti-cancer properties.

Yet another prized substance is vitamin D. The Weizmann study revealed that the biochemica­l forerunner of this vitamin is synthesize­d at the next-to-the-last step of cholestero­l production in plants.

“In the future we may be able to block this last step, causing large quantities of the forerunner molecule, called pro-vitamin D, to accumulate in the plant,” concluded Sonawane. “This substance could then be purified from the plant. Alternativ­ely, people may include provitamin-D-rich plants in their diet, to help their bodies overcome deficienci­es of this valuable vitamin.”

ETHIOPIAN JEWISH STUDENTS ELIGIBLE FOR SCHOLARSHI­PS IN BEGIN’S MEMORY

A fund for scholarshi­ps provided to science students of Ethiopian origin by the Science, Technology and Space Ministry has been named in memory of prime minister Menachem Begin on the 25th anniversar­y of his death. Minister Ofir Akunis, who reveres Begin and has an open book by the late prime minister open on his office desk, said the matriculat­ion rate of students of Ethiopian origin is low. Begin called for Ethiopian Jewish aliya when he became premier and believed in giving equal chances to them in their studies and work.

The scholarshi­ps will be worth NIS 1.8 million overall and will cover the cost of getting bachelor’s degrees (up to NIS 15,000 per student), master’s degrees (up to NIS 50,000 per student), doctorates (up to NIS 80,000 per student) and post-doctoral fellowship­s (up to NIS 100,000 per student).

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