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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 1997, 918-923, Vol 41, No. 5
JJ Rahn, DM Kieller, DL Tyrrell and WP Gati
beta-L-(-)-2',3'-Dideoxy-3'-thiacytidine (3TC) is a cytosine nucleoside
analog that potently inhibits the replication of human and duck hepatitis B
viruses and human immunodeficiency virus through the activity of its
5'-triphosphate ester metabolite. The present study examined the
intracellular decay of 3TC 5'-phosphates and tested strategies for
modulating the cellular content of those nucleotides in primary cultures of
duck hepatocytes and in human hepatoma 2.2.15 cells and CCRF-CEM T
lymphoblasts. Inhibition by deoxycytidine of the 5'- phosphorylation of 3TC
in duck hepatocytes confirmed that, as in mammalian cells, deoxycytidine
kinase catalyzed 3TC activation. The 5'- mono, 5'-di-, and 5'-triphosphates
of 3TC underwent monoexponential elimination from duck hepatocytes and
2.2.15 cells (half-lives, 3.6 to 8.0 h). Thymidine and fludarabine, which
are agents that enhance the activity of deoxycytidine kinase, were tested
in strategies for increasing the cellular content of 3TC 5'-phosphates.
Coordinate treatment of cells with 3TC and thymidine (50 microM) increased
the content of 3TC 5'-monophosphate in duck hepatocytes and the content of
3TC 5'-di- and 5'-triphosphates in 2.2.15 cells, but enhancement of 3TC
5'-phosphate levels in CCRF-CEM cells required a higher thymidine
concentration (100 microM). Fludarabine (5 microM) did not affect the
contents of 3TC 5'-di- and 5'-triphosphates in duck hepatocytes, but
modestly increased the contents of those nucleotides in 2.2.15 cells and
CCRF-CEM cells. Nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR), an inhibitor of the es
facilitated diffusion nucleoside transporter, reduced the level of entry of
3TC into 2.2.15 cells and abolished inward fluxes of thymidine, adenosine,
and deoxycytidine. In 2.2.15 cells and CCRF-CEM cells, NBMPR reduced the
formation of 3TC 5'-di- and 5'-triphosphates and reversed the thymidine-
and fludarabine-induced increases in the formation of those nucleotides.
NBMPR protected against the cytotoxicity of 3TC in CCRF-CEM cells, whereas
thymidine potentiated that toxicity, apparently by enhancing the formation
of 3TC 5'- triphosphate. Taken together, these results indicate that
deoxycytidine kinase and the es nucleoside transporter are targets for
manipulation of the metabolism and activity of 3TC.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Modulation of the metabolism of beta-L-(-)-2',3'-dideoxy-3'- thiacytidine by thymidine, fludarabine, and nitrobenzylthioinosine
Department of Pharmacology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
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