Abstract: | An assay for measuring ergosterol synthesis in cell-free extracts of the filamentous plant pathogen Botrytis cinerea is described. The extracts capable of synthesizing C4-desmethyl sterols from 2- 14 C]mevalonate were derived by mechanical disruption of young conidial germlings in a Bead-Beater apparatus. The C4-desmethyl sterol fraction consisted of three distinct compounds and totalled 39% of the non-saponifiable lipids formed. Ergosterol accounted for 63% of the C4-desmethyl sterols. Only small amounts of C4-monomethyl sterols were synthesized, while C4, 4-dimethyl sterols made up 29% of the non-saponifiable lipids. The latter fraction mainly consisted of lanosterol (54%) and eburicol (28%). The cell-free system had a narrow pH optimum for synthesis of C4-desmethyl sterols of pH 7.3–7.4. Cell-free synthesis of C4-desmethyl sterols was inhibited by the imidazole fungicide imazalil, concomitant with an accumulation of eburicol. The IC50 value (concentration of fungicide which inhibited cell-free synthesis of C4-desmethyl sterols by 50%) was 9.1 × 10 ?9 M. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that imazalil is a potent inhibitor of the cytochrome P450-dependent sterol 14x-demethylase of B. cinerea. The method described may be used to screen compounds biochemically for inhibition of sterol synthesis in an agriculturally important plant pathogen. |