Incubation of [7-2H2]cholesterol with soybean lipoxygenase and linoleic acid in the presence of oxygen gave a mixture of 5-cholestene-3 beta,7 alpha-diol, 5-cholestene-3 beta,7 beta-diol, 3 beta-hydroxy-5-cholesten-7-one,5 alpha,6 alpha-epoxycholestan-3 beta-ol, and 5 beta,6 beta-epoxycholestan-3 beta-ol. The conversion into the 7-oxygenated products was associated with a very high intermolecular isotope effect (KH/KD = 15-17), suggesting that the rate-limiting step in the overall conversion is likely to be the abstraction of hydrogen at C-7 in a radical reaction. Evidence that linoleic acid is to some extent directly involved was obtained with the use of [7-3H]cholesterol. Incubation of [7-3H]cholesterol resulted in a significant incorporation of 3H in the reisolated linoleic acid fraction. The isotope effect associated with conversion of [7 alpha-2H]cholesterol into 7-oxygenated products in the lipoxygenase system was 2-3, indicating that the extraction of hydrogen is nonstereospecific. Incubation of [7-2H2]cholesterol with 13-hydroperoxy-9,11-octadecadienoic acid gave the above 7-oxygenated products with relatively small isotope effects (KH/KD = 3-4). It is concluded that the most important mechanism for oxidation of cholesterol at C-7 in the lipoxygenase system involves participation of radicals and that a carbon-centered linoleic acid radical can extract hydrogen directly from cholesterol. Fatty acid hydroperoxides and their secondary products seem to be less important as initiators in connection with oxidation of cholesterol.