Chemical engineering The use of β-sitosterol as a chemical intermediate was for many years limited due to the lack of a chemical point of attack on the side-chain that would permit its removal. Extensive efforts on the part of many laboratories eventually led to the discovery of a
pseudomonas microbe that efficiently effected that transformation. Fermentation digests the entire aliphatic side-chain at carbon 17 to afford a mixture of 17-keto products including
dehydroepiandrosterone.
Synthesis Total synthesis of β-sitosterol has not been achieved. However, β-sitosterol has been synthesized from stigmasterol
1, which involves a specific hydrogenation of the side-chain of stigmasterol. The first step in the synthesis forms stigmasterol tosylate
2 from stigmasterol
1 (95% purity) using p-TsCl, DMAP, and pyridine (90% yield). The tosylate
2 then undergoes solvolysis as it is treated with pyridine and anhydrous MeOH to give a 5:1 ratio of i-stigmasterol methyl ether
3 (74% yield) to stigmasterol methyl ether
4, which is subsequently removed by chromatography. The hydrogenation step of a previously proposed synthesis involved the catalyst Pd/C and the solvent ethyl acetate. However, due to isomerisation during hydrolysis, other catalysts, such as PtO2, and solvents, such as ethanol, were tested. There was little change with the use of a different catalyst. Ethanol, however, prevented isomerisation and the formation of the unidentified impurity to give compound
5. The last step of the synthesis is deprotection of the β-ring double bond of
5 with p-TsOH, aqueous dioxane, and heat (80 °C) to yield β-sitosterol
6. The cumulative yield for the final two steps was 55%, and the total yield for the synthesis was 37%. ==Biosynthesis==