Gamma-oryzanol is most well known for being a component of Rice Bran Oil[1] as well as rice itself[2][3][4] and is credited alongside Policosanol and tocotrienols (alternate forms of Vitamin E) for cholesterol reducing properties as a combination of unsaponifiable constituents.[5][6]
The aforementioned 'unsaponifiable' constituents are merely a subset of the fatty acids which do not undergo saponification reactions (similar to soap making processes), in this scenario it is due to the sterols known as Gamma-Oryzanol being bound to a molecule known as Ferulic Acid; Gamma-Oryzanol is essentially a term used to refer to a collection of ferulated sterols.
Rice bran itself (10% of unprocessed rice by weight) is 18-22% oil, of which up to 5% is the unsaponifiable fraction.[7] Due to this, the benefits associated with Gamma-Oryzanol may not be easily achieved with oral Rice Bran, due to Gamma-Oryzanol being at best 0.1% of Rice Bran by weight; Rice Brain Oil is plausible, but requires an oral dose of 6g to mimick 300mg Gamma-Oryzanol.[7]