Furthermore, high LDL appears to be a sign of cholesterol sulfate deficiency — it's your body's way of trying to maintain the correct balance by taking damaged LDL and turning it into plaque, within which the blood platelets
produce the cholesterol sulfate your heart and brain needs for optimal function.
In summary, a number of different arguments lead to the hypothesis that sulfur deficiency causes the liver to shift from
producing cholesterol sulfate to producing arginine (and subsequently nitric oxide).
Not exact matches
Furthermore, apparently the body is unable to
produce vitamin D3
sulfate directly from unsulfated vitamin D3 19 (which implies that it
produces vitamin D3
sulfate directly from
cholesterol sulfate).
Given that
cholesterol sulfate and vitamin D3
sulfate are very similar in molecular structure, I would imagine that both molecules are
produced the same way.