[
1987]
Current knowledge of sterol biochemistry and physiology in nematodes is reviewed. Nematodes possess a nutritional requirement for sterol because they lack the capacity for de novo sterol biosynthesis. The free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has recently been used as a model organism for investigation of nematode sterol metabolism. C. elegans is capable of removal of the C-24 alkyl substituent of plant sterols such as sitosterol and also possesses the remarkable ability to attach a methyl group at C-4 on the sterol nucleus. An azasteroid and several long-chain alkyl amines disrupt the phytosterol dealkylation pathway in C. elegans by inhibiting its *24-sterol reductase. These compounds inhibit growth and reproduction in certain parasitic nematodes and provide model compounds for development of novel nematode control