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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, March 2002, p. 716-723, Vol. 46, No. 3
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.3.716-723.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Assessment of Mitochondrial Toxicity in Human Cells Treated with Tenofovir: Comparison with Other Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors
Gabriel Birkus, Michael J. M. Hitchcock, and Tomas Cihlar*
Gilead Sciences, Foster City, California 94404
Received 17 July 2001/
Returned for modification 22 October 2001/
Accepted 3 December 2001

ABSTRACT
Drug-associated dysfunction of mitochondria is believed to play
a role in the etiology of the various adverse symptoms that
occur in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients
treated with the nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
(NRTIs). Tenofovir, a nucleotide analog recently approved for
use in the treatment of HIV infection, was evaluated in vitro
for its potential to cause mitochondrial toxicity and was compared
to currently used NRTIs. Treatment with tenofovir (3 to 300
µM) for up to 3 weeks produced no significant changes
in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) levels in human hepatoblastoma
(HepG2) cells, skeletal muscle cells (SkMCs), or renal proximal
tubule epithelial cells. The potencies of inhibition of mtDNA
synthesis by the NRTIs tested were zalcitabine (ddC) > didanosine
(ddI) > stavudine > zidovudine (ZDV) > lamivudine =
abacavir = tenofovir, with comparable relative effects in the
three cell types. Unlike ddC and ddI, tenofovir did not affect
cellular expression of COX II and COX IV, two components of
the mitochondrial cytochrome
c oxidase complex. Lactate production
was elevated by less than 20% in HepG2 cells or SkMCs following
treatment with 300 µM tenofovir. In contrast, lactate
synthesis increased by >200% in the presence of 300 µM
ZDV. Thus, treatment of various human cell types with tenofovir
at concentrations that greatly exceed those required for it
both to have in vitro anti-HIV type 1 activity in peripheral
blood mononuclear cells (50% effective concentration, 0.2 µM)
and to achieve therapeutically relevant levels in plasma (maximum
concentrations in plasma, 0.8 to 1.3 µM) is not associated
with mitochondrial toxicity.

INTRODUCTION
A variety of clinical symptoms such as myopathy, polyneuropathy,
lactic acidosis, liver steatosis, pancreatitis, and lipodystrophy
have been identified in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected
patients treated with antiretroviral therapy containing one
or more nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs)
(
6,
34). Some of these adverse effects, which usually occur
after prolonged treatment, are linked to mitochondrial toxicity,
as demonstrated in a number of in vitro and in vivo studies
with various NRTIs. Zidovudine (ZDV) is known to induce mitochondrial
toxicity in rat heart muscle, skeletal muscles, and other tissues
(
24,
27) as well as cause an increase in the oxidative damage
of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in mouse skeletal muscle and liver
tissues (
18,
19). More importantly, morphological changes in
mitochondria, cytochrome
c oxidase deficiency, and reductions
in mtDNA levels have been detected in muscle tissue from HIV-infected
patients with ZDV-induced myopathy (
2,
17,
46). Zalcitabine
(ddC) has been implicated in the induction of neuropathy in
HIV-infected patients (
20) and simian immunodeficiency virus-infected
macaques (
44). It has been shown that ddC can cause mitochondrial
alterations in Schwann cells in a rabbit model of ddC-induced
neuropathy (
1). Didanosine (ddI) and stavudine (d4T) therapy
can induce adverse effects such as hepatic steatosis and lactic
acidosis, which are presumably also a consequence of drug-associated
mitochondrial toxicity (
5,
32). In contrast, the etiology of
abacavir-associated adverse effects such as hypersensitivity
does not seem to involve mitochondrial toxicity (
21,
22). Lamivudine
(3TC) appears to produce fewer side effects than the other NRTIs
(
6,
38).
Clinical toxicities due to the mitochondrial dysfunction induced by NRTIs may limit certain treatment regimens and may even produce fatal complications, as documented for some cases of severe lactic acidosis (43). Therefore, it is important to evaluate new drugs from the NRTI class for their potential to cause mitochondrial dysfunction. NRTI-associated mitochondrial toxicity can be assessed in vitro by measuring specific markers such as mtDNA synthesis or production of lactic acid in drug-treated cell cultures (4, 36). Active phosphorylated forms of some NRTIs are potent inhibitors of DNA polymerase
(DNA pol
), an enzyme solely responsible for mtDNA replication, causing inhibition of de novo mtDNA synthesis during the process of mitochondrial division (28). In addition, drug-related deficiencies in the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation system may result in a blockage of pyruvate oxidation, leading to an elevated level of production of lactic acid (6).
Tenofovir (Fig. 1)
is a novel nucleotide analog with potent anti-HIV activity and a favorable resistance profile. Its oral prodrug, tenofovir disoproxil [bis(isopropyloxymethylcarbonyl)-9-R-(2-phosphonomethoxypropyl)adenine] (Fig. 1), has recently been approved for use in the treatment of HIV-infected patients (3; R. Schooley, P. Ruane, R. Myers, G. Beall, H. Lampiris, et al., Abstr. 41st Intersci. Conf. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., abstr. I-1929, 2001). In this study, tenofovir was characterized and compared with the currently used NRTIs for its potential to cause mitochondrial toxicity in various types of cells of human origin. The results indicate that the potential for tenofovir to interfere with mitochondrial functions is low.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Drugs.
ZDV, d4T, ddC, and ddI were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis,
Mo.), 3TC was supplied by Moravek Biochemicals (Brea, Calif.),
tenofovir was prepared by Gilead Sciences (Foster City, Calif.),
and abacavir was provided by GlaxoWellcome (Research Triangle
Park, N.C.).
Cells.
A human hepatoblastoma cell line (HepG2 cells; American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, Va.) was maintained in minimal essential medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 1 mM pyruvate, and antibiotics. Primary normal human skeletal muscle cells (SkMCs) were purchased from Clonetics (San Diego, Calif.) and were grown for a maximum of four passages in a serum-free medium supplied by the vendor. Primary human renal proximal tubule epithelial cells (RPTECs) were provided by Kenneth McMartin (Louisiana State University, Shreveport) and were maintained on plastic dishes coated with Vitrogen-100 (Collagen Biomaterials, Palo Alto, Calif.). RPTECs were grown for a maximum of three passages in Dulbecco's minimal essential medium-F-12 medium (1:1) supplemented with 5 ng of selenium per ml, 5 µg of insulin per ml, 5 µg of transferrin per ml, 40 ng of hydrocortisone per ml, 10 ng of epidermal growth factor (Collaborative Research, Bedford, Mass.) per ml, and 4 pg of triiodothyronine per ml (33).
Determination of mtDNA content.
DNA probes were generated by PCR from total DNA isolated from HepG2 cells with a QIAmp tissue kit (Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.). A mitochondrial DNA probe specific for cytochrome b was amplified with primers 5"-TGACCCCAATACGCAAAATTAACC-3" and 5"-CATTTGAGTATTTTGTTTTCAATTAGG-3" and encompassed nucleotides 14172 to 15306 of the mitochondrial genome (GenBank accession no. X93334). A chromosomal DNA-specific ß-actin probe (nucleotides 2039 to 3065 of the DNA fragment comprising the ß-actin gene; GenBank accession no. E01094) was amplified by PCR with primers 5"-AGACCTTCAACACCCCAGCCATGTACG-3" and 5"-TCTTGTTTTCTGCGCAAGTTAGGTTTTGTC-3". Both probes were purified by gel electrophoresis and labeled with [33P]dCTP with the Prime-It II labeling kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.). The specificity of each probe was determined by hybridization with samples of DNA from nuclear and mitochondrial fractions isolated from RPTECs.
HepG2 cells and SkMCs were plated into 24-well plates (3,000 cells/cm2). At 24 h, fresh medium containing test drugs at 10-fold serial dilutions was added. The cells were maintained in the presence of the drugs for 9 or 18 days, with replacement of the drug-containing medium every 4 days. In the experiment with quiescent SkMCs, the cells were seeded into Vitrogen-100-coated 24-well plates (10,000 cells/cm2). After the cells reached confluence, fresh medium containing the test drugs was added and the cells were maintained for 21 days with a medium change every 5 days. RPTECs were seeded into Vitrogen-100-coated 12-mm Millicell-CM inserts (Millipore, Bedford, Mass.) at a density of 150,000 cells/insert, and the inserts were placed into 24-well plates. After formation of tight junctions, which was assessed by measuring the transepithelial resistance (33), the cells were fed fresh medium containing the test drug in both the apical and the basolateral compartments and incubated for 12 or 21 days with medium changes every 3 days. At the end of incubation, HepG2 cells and SkMCs were trypsinized, pelleted by centrifugation, and lysed in 0.5 M NaOH-12.5 mM EDTA. The inserts containing RPTECs were washed in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and the membranes with cells were removed from the inserts with a scalpel and placed in 0.5 ml of the lysis solution described above. All lysates were heated at 100°C for 10 min, centrifuged, and slot blotted onto a Zeta-Probe membrane (Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.) according to the vendor's protocol. DNA was cross-linked to the membrane with UV light, and the membrane was prehybridized and sequentially hybridized with the ß-actin- and cytochrome b-specific probes (107 dpm/ml) under the conditions recommended by the manufacturer. Following each hybridization, the signals were quantified with a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, Calif.). The relative amount of mtDNA was calculated as the ratio of the cytochrome b signal to the ß-actin signal and was expressed as a percentage relative to that for the untreated control.
Immunoblot analysis.
Cells were seeded into 75-cm2 flasks at a density of 3,000 cells/cm2. Test compounds were added 24 h later, and the cells were incubated for 9 days with one change of the medium. After a wash of the cells with PBS and a 10-min incubation in the presence of 2 ml of lysis buffer (150 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 0.5% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 1% Nonidet P-40, 5 mM EDTA, mammalian protease inhibitor cocktail purchased from Roche Molecular Biochemicals), the cells were scraped and disintegrated with a Dounce homogenizer. The lysate was clarified by centrifugation, and proteins were concentrated with a Centricon YM-3 apparatus (Millipore). Following separation by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE; 10 µg of protein/sample), the proteins were electroblotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Millipore). The membrane was blocked for 2 h in PBS-0.1% Tween 20 (PBS-Tween) containing 5% nonfat dry milk, washed with PBS-Tween, and incubated with a mixture of mouse monoclonal antibodies, anti-COX II (2.2 µg/ml; Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.), anti-COX IV (5.5 µg/ml; Molecular Probes), and anti-G3PD (5 µg/ml; Advanced ImmunoChemical, Long Beach, Calif.), in PBS-Tween containing 1% bovine serum albumin. After extensive washing with PBS-Tween, the membrane was incubated in the presence of 2.5 µCi of anti-mouse [35S]immunoglobulin G (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, N.J.) per ml. The washed membrane was analyzed with the PhosphorImager, and the signal corresponding to each protein was quantified.
Measurement of lactate production.
Twenty-four hours after plating of HepG2 cells or SkMCs into 24-well plates (3,000 cells/cm2), fresh medium containing the test drugs at concentrations of 30 and 300 µM was added. Medium was collected 3 or 6 days later and was extracted with 2 volumes of ice-cold 10% trichloroacetic acid. The lactic acid concentration in the deproteinized medium was measured with a diagnostic kit (Sigma) by the protocol specified by the manufacturer. The treated cells were washed on plates, trypsinized, and counted. Following assay calibration, the concentration of lactate in the medium was determined and expressed as the number of milligrams per 106 cells.

RESULTS
Effects of tenofovir and other NRTIs on mtDNA content in liver and skeletal muscle cells.
Clinical adverse effects due to NRTI-induced mitochondrial toxicity
frequently occur in liver and muscle tissues (
6). Therefore,
the in vitro experiments performed to assess the mitochondrial
toxicity of tenofovir were carried out with HepG2 cells and
SkMCs. The effects of tenofovir and other NRTIs on mtDNA synthesis
were determined from the ratio of mtDNA and chromosomal DNA
calculated following sequential hybridization of total cellular
DNA with specific probes derived from mtDNA and chromosomal
DNA sequences. The analyses revealed no interference with mtDNA
synthesis in HepG2 cells following a 9-day incubation with tenofovir
at concentrations as high as 300 µM (Fig.
2). In contrast,
ddC and ddI at concentrations of 30 and 300 µM, respectively,
completely depleted the mtDNA in HepG2 cells. d4T and ZDV at
concentrations up to 30 µM showed no deleterious effects,
but exposure of the cells to concentrations of 300 µM
reduced the mtDNA contents by approximately 40 and 25%, respectively.
Similar to tenofovir, 3TC and abacavir did not significantly
change the levels of mtDNA in HepG2 liver cells.
Tenofovir disoproxil, a lipophilic oral prodrug of tenofovir,
was also tested for its effects on the mtDNA content in HepG2
cells and was found not to induce any changes at concentrations
as high as 3 µM. After 9 days of treatment with tenofovir
disoproxil at concentrations of 0.3 and 3 µM, the mtDNA
contents were 90.5% ± 20.6% and 99.4% ± 12.6%
(the values are means ± standard deviations of two independent
experiments performed in triplicate) compared with those in
control mtDNA, respectively. As a positive control, after 9
days of treatment with ddC at concentrations of 0.3 and 3 µM,
the mtDNA contents were 66.2% ± 5.6% and 8.2% ±
4.5%, respectively. The prodrug of tenofovir can enter cells
by passive diffusion across the plasma membrane and delivers
a greater than 1,000-fold higher concentration of the active
metabolite, tenofovir diphosphate (tenofovir-DP), into the cells
compared to the concentration delivered by free tenofovir (
41).
Exposure of SkMCs to tenofovir and other NRTIs resulted in effects similar to those observed with HepG2 cells. Proliferating cells did not show any decrease in mtDNA levels following a 9-day exposure to concentrations of tenofovir as high as 300 µM (Fig. 3A). Likewise, 3TC, abacavir, and ZDV did not deplete mtDNA under the same experimental conditions. d4T at a concentration of 300 µM reduced mtDNA levels by approximately 50%. ddC and ddI showed even more pronounced effects in SkMCs than in HepG2 cells, causing almost complete depletion of mtDNA at 3 and 30 µM, respectively. Virtually identical effects, including no depletion of mtDNA by tenofovir, were observed for the test drugs following an 18-day treatment of proliferating SkMCs (Fig. 3B) or a 3-week treatment of quiescent nonproliferating SkMCs maintained on a collagen-coated surface (data not shown).
mtDNA content in renal proximal tubule cells treated with NRTIs.
Tenofovir can potentially accumulate in the kidney due to its
active transport by the organic anion transporter 1 expressed
in renal proximal tubules (
12). Thus, in addition to liver and
skeletal muscle cells, the effects of tenofovir and other NRTIs
on mtDNA content were characterized in normal human RPTECs.
As shown in Table
1, changes in relative mtDNA levels were minimal
following treatment of differentiated RPTECs cultured on microporous
membranes in the presence of 300 µM tenofovir or 200 µM
ZDV for up to 21 days. While 200 µM d4T produced only
a minor decrease in the mtDNA content, ddC and ddI showed potent
inhibition of mtDNA synthesis in RPTECs at markedly lower concentrations.
Effect of NRTIs on cellular expression of cytochrome c oxidase.
In order to determine whether the drug-induced depletion of
mtDNA exerts an impact on the levels of mitochondrial proteins,
we characterized the effects of ddC, ddI, and tenofovir on the
expression of cytochrome
c oxidase, a multiprotein mitochondrial
complex comprising 13 subunits (
13). Three subunits (COX I to
III) constitute the catalytic core of the enzyme and are encoded
by mtDNA; the remaining 10 subunits are expressed from nuclear
genes. Immunoblot analysis following 9 days of drug treatment
was used to characterize changes in the levels of the cellular
expression of the COX II and COX IV subunits of cytochrome
c oxidase encoded by mtDNA and nuclear DNA, respectively. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
dehydrogenase was quantified simultaneously with the mitochondrial
proteins and was used as a standard to determine the relative
changes in the levels of expression of COX II and COX IV. Treatment
of HepG2 cells with 300 µM tenofovir did not reduce the
level of cellular expression of either of the two proteins (Fig.
4). In contrast, exposure of HepG2 cells to 30 µM ddC
or 300 µM ddI inhibited the level of expression of COX
II by >90%. These two NRTIs also reduced cellular levels
of COX IV by approximately 40 to 50%. Depletion of both COX
II and COX IV was also detected in SkMCs treated with 30 µM
ddC or 300 µM ddI (data not shown). However, only minimal
changes in the levels of expression of COX II and COX IV (83
and 103% relative to the levels of expression by the untreated
control, respectively) were detected in SkMCs cultured for 9
days in the presence of 300 µM tenofovir.
Production of lactate in cells treated with NRTIs.
Lactic acidosis is one of the most serious complications induced
by prolonged therapy with NRTIs. When diagnosed, it often requires
intensive care (
32) and can be fatal in some patients (
43).
Therefore, lactic acid production is considered an important
marker for characterization of NRTI-induced mitochondrial dysfunction.
Prior in vitro studies have demonstrated that ZDV can increase
the level of extracellular production of lactate in HepG2 cells
(
36) and SkMCs (
4). In contrast, 3TC has been shown to have
no effect on the levels of lactate produced by HepG2 cells (
15).
However, the studies with 3TC were conducted with relatively
low drug concentrations (10 µM).
Tenofovir was tested at concentrations up to 300 µM, and its effect on lactate production by HepG2 cells and SkMCs was compared with those of ZDV, ddC, and 3TC. As shown in Table 2, tenofovir increased the levels of extracellular lactate production by <20% in HepG2 cells and SkMCs after incubation for 3 and 6 days, respectively. Similarly, an insignificant (<20%) increase in the level of lactate production compared to that by the untreated control was detected after incubation of the cells with 3TC, indicating that this drug has no effect even at concentrations higher than those studied previously (36). In contrast, ZDV treatment produced a concentration-dependent elevation in the level of lactate production in both HepG2 cells and SkMCs, with two- to threefold increases at 300 µM, a result consistent with observations described previously (4, 36). Even though 30 µM ddC caused almost complete depletion of mtDNA, leading to a virtual knockout of COX II expression, it only increased the level of lactate production by 30 to 50% in SkMCs and HepG2 cells, an effect comparable to that of ZDV.

DISCUSSION
Various therapy-limiting adverse effects observed in HIV-infected
patients treated with NRTIs have been linked to mitochondrial
toxicity (
6,
34). One of the proposed mechanisms by which NRTIs
interfere with mitochondrial functions is the depletion of mtDNA
due to the inhibition of DNA pol

by NRTI triphosphates (
22,
23). Some NRTI triphosphates such as ddCTP inhibit DNA pol
and HIV type 1(HIV-1) reverse transcriptase with similar potencies,
resulting in a narrow therapeutic window (
9). Inhibition studies
with DNA pol

are therefore important for evaluation of the
potential of NRTIs to cause mitochondrial dysfunction. However,
because differences in levels of mitochondrial accumulation
and/or phosphorylation of NRTIs may exist in different tissues,
the conclusions derived from the results of inhibition studies
with DNA pol

should be confirmed by experiments determining
the effects of the test drugs on mtDNA synthesis in various
cell types.
Tenofovir-DP, the active metabolite of tenofovir and a structural analog of dATP, is a weaker inhibitor of DNA pol
than most of the other NRTI triphosphates, with a Ki of 60 µM (9). In contrast, HIV-1 reverse transcriptase is efficiently inhibited by tenofovir-DP, with Ki values of 1.55 and 0.022 µM when the values are determined with DNA and RNA templates, respectively (9). Incorporation of tenofovir into a DNA primer-template by DNA pol
is also less efficient than that of other NRTIs (11), suggesting a weak inhibition of mtDNA synthesis in cells treated with tenofovir. In order to confirm this assumption in various cell types, the effects of tenofovir and six clinically used NRTIs on mtDNA synthesis were evaluated in HepG2 cells, normal SkMCs, and normal human RPTECs. In all three cell types tested, tenofovir showed no interference with mtDNA synthesis at concentrations as high as 300 µM. Similarly, treatment of the cells with tenofovir did not result in elevated levels of production of lactic acid. This is consistent with the low level of cytotoxicity of tenofovir observed in the three cell types (10, 12). Tenofovir disoproxil, a lipophilic oral prodrug of tenofovir which substantially increases the cellular permeation of tenofovir (41), was also evaluated at concentrations up to 3 µM and did not inhibit synthesis of mtDNA. In comparison, tenofovir and tenofovir disoproxil inhibit HIV-1 replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, with 50% inhibitory concentrations of 0.18 and 0.005 µM, respectively (41). In vitro stability studies and preclinical pharmacokinetic studies suggest that tenofovir disoproxil is rapidly cleaved to tenofovir upon intestinal absorption. The therapeutic dose of tenofovir disoproxil in HIV-infected patients (300 mg once daily) delivers tenofovir into the systemic circulation and produces peak concentrations in plasma of 240 to 374 ng/ml (0.8 to 1.3 µM) (3). Thus, at concentrations that greatly exceed their effective antiviral concentrations and therapeutically relevant levels in plasma, both tenofovir and its prodrug show no significant effects on mtDNA synthesis.
Similar to tenofovir, 3TC and abacavir had minimal effects on the mtDNA contents in HepG2 cells and SkMCs. This observation confirms data from prior studies with 3TC in HepG2 cells (36) and T cells (28) and extends them to other cell types. Likewise, prior results with carbovir, the active metabolite of abacavir, in T-lymphoblastoid cells indicate a low potential for abacavir to interfere with mtDNA replication (37). Carbovir triphosphate was identified as one of the weakest DNA pol
inhibitors among a number of NRTI triphosphates, with a Ki/Km value of 100 (28), a result similar to that obtained with tenofovir-DP (9).
Consistent with our data, ZDV has been shown to have only minor effects on the mtDNA content compared with those of other NRTIs such as ddC or ddI in various cell culture models (8, 14, 36). In contrast, severely reduced mtDNA contents have been found in skeletal muscle tissue from ZDV-treated mice (24) and from patients with fully developed ZDV-induced myopathy (2). Recent in vitro studies have demonstrated that ZDV can reduce the capacity of the respiratory chain in mitochondria without depleting mtDNA (36). In addition, oxidative damage of mtDNA has been detected in muscle and liver tissues from mice treated with ZDV (18, 19), suggesting that the primary mechanism of ZDV-associated mitochondrial dysfunction may also involve some other effects besides the direct inhibition of mtDNA replication. This hypothesis is supported by a substantially weaker inhibitory effect of ZDV triphosphate on DNA pol
compared to those of other NRTI triphosphates such as ddCTP, ddATP, and d4TTP (9, 28). Additional support for this hypothesis is provided by our observations that ZDV can substantially increase the levels of lactate production in both liver and skeletal muscle cells without substantial depletion of mtDNA.
Our study revealed that d4T has concentration-dependent effects on mtDNA levels in HepG2 cells and SKMCs. Likewise, a detectable effect of d4T was observed in RPTECs. It is apparent that the effects of d4T on the mtDNA levels are cell type dependent. While 10 µM d4T reduced the mtDNA content by 50% in different T-lymphoblastoid cell lines (28, 31), HepG2 cells and SkMCs exhibited similar decreases in mtDNA synthesis following exposure to 300 µM d4T. Since d4T triphosphate is a potent inhibitor of DNA pol
(Ki = 0.05 µM) (28) and also undergoes efficient incorporation into DNA primer-template by this enzyme (11), differences in the levels of drug accumulation and/or phosphorylation in the mitochondria of various cell types presumably account for the cell type-dependent effects of d4T on mtDNA synthesis.
A number of prior in vitro studies have demonstrated a profound depletion of mtDNA in the presence of dideoxynucleosides. ddI and ddC inhibit mtDNA synthesis in a broad spectrum of cell types including neuronal pheochromocytoma cells (14), T-lymphoblastoid cells (8, 31), HepG2 cells (36), and a monocyte-derived cell line (42). In all cases, the effects of ddC are more severe than those produced by ddI, with significant decreases in mtDNA levels detected at submicromolar concentrations. In our study, ddC caused more severe depletions of mtDNA than ddI did in all three cell types tested. However, ddATP, the active metabolite of ddI, shows an affinity toward DNA pol
as both a substrate (11) and an inhibitor (9) which is comparable to that of ddCTP. The differential effects of the two drugs on mtDNA might be due to differences in their intracellular phosphorylation (23).
The rank order of the effects of the NRTIs tested on mtDNA content was similar in the three human cell types studied (ddC > ddI > d4T > ZDV > 3TC = abacavir = tenofovir) and is approximately concordant with the efficiencies at which the respective NRTI triphosphates are incorporated into DNA by DNA pol
(ddCTP = ddATP > d4TTP > 3TC triphosphate > tenofovir-DP > ZDV triphosphate) (11). This correlation can be explained, at least in part, by the fact that none of the tested NRTIs contains a 3"-like hydroxyl group in their molecules, and thus, they all act as absolute chain terminators following their incorporation into de novo synthesized DNA (11). In contrast, fialuridine (FIAU), a nucleoside analog that induces severe clinical symptoms due to its mitochondrial toxicity (30), contains a 3"-like hydroxyl and can be elongated following its incorporation into DNA by DNA pol
(25, 26). FIAU is efficiently phosphorylated by mitochondrial thymidine kinase (45), and the affinity of FIAU triphosphate toward DNA pol
is comparable to that of ddC triphosphate (25, 28). Yet, FIAU does not induce depletion of mtDNA as profound as that induced by ddC (16, 25; G. Birkus and T. Cihlar, unpublished data), suggesting that the internal incorporation of FIAU may result in functional damage of mtDNA in the absence of its substantial depletion.
Depletion of mtDNA caused by treatment of cells with ddC or ddI reduced the level of expression of COX II, a subunit of the cytochrome c oxidase complex encoded by mtDNA. It has been previously shown that the mtDNA depletion induced by treatment of cells with ethidium bromide ([rho0] phenotype) causes reductions in the levels of multiple mtDNA-encoded proteins (7). Thus, the reduced levels of COX II expression in ddI- or ddC-treated cells is probably representative of the situation for other mtDNA-encoded proteins as well. In addition to low levels of COX II, COX IV, a nuclear DNA-encoded component of the complex, is also present at lower levels in ddC- and ddI-treated cells. Reduced levels of nuclear DNA-encoded cytochrome c oxidase subunits in conjunction with suppressed levels of mtDNA-encoded subunits have been observed in primary cells from patients with various forms of cytochrome c oxidase deficiency including COX II deficiency (40) as well as in cell lines with the [rho0] phenotype (29). Similarly, analysis of muscle tissue from patients with ZDV-induced myopathy revealed reduced levels of COX II as well as reduced levels of COX IV (46). These concerted reductions in the levels of mitochondrial proteins expressed from mtDNA and the levels of proteins expressed from nuclear DNA may be due to a limited stability of uncomplexed nuclear DNA-encoded cytochrome c oxidase subunits since the mtDNA-encoded subunits play essential roles in the early steps of the complex assembly (35). In addition, there may be communication between the mitochondrion and the nucleus via metabolic and signal transduction pathways to control the expression of nuclear DNA-encoded mitochondrial proteins such as cytochrome c oxidase subunits (39).
In summary, this study demonstrates that the potential of the anti-HIV nucleotide analog tenofovir to induce mitochondrial toxicity in different human cell types is low. Comparison with the other NRTIs currently used for treatment of HIV infection indicates that within the class of NRTIs, the potential that tenofovir will produce adverse effects caused by drug-associated mitochondrial dysfunction is low. These data are consistent with the favorable tolerability profile of tenofovir observed in HIV-infected patients (Schooley et al., 41st ICAAC).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Craig Gibbs from Gilead Sciences for critical reading
of the manuscript and Kenneth McMartin from Louisiana State
University, Shreveport, for RPTECs.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Gilead Sciences, 333 Lakeside Dr., Foster City, CA 94404. Phone: (650) 522-5637. Fax: (650) 522-5890. E-mail:
tomas_cihlar{at}gilead.com.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, March 2002, p. 716-723, Vol. 46, No. 3
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.3.716-723.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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