Literature DB >> 15219281

Cytotoxicity and cellular uptake of pyrimidine nucleosides for imaging herpes simplex type-1 thymidine kinase (HSV-1 TK) expression in mammalian cells.

Kevin W Morin1, Weili Duan, Lihua Xu, Aihua Zhou, Sameh Moharram, Edward E Knaus, Alexander J B McEwan, Leonard I Wiebe.   

Abstract

In vivo transfer of the herpes simplex virus type-1 thymidine kinase (HSV-1 TK) gene, with subsequent administration of antiviral drugs such as ganciclovir, has emerged as a promising gene therapy protocol for treating proliferative disorders. The in vitro cytotoxicities (IC(50)) for two series of 5-iodo- and (E)-5-(2-iodovinyl)-substituted 2'-deoxy- and 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-pyrimidine nucleosides ranged from millimolar to low nanomolar concentrations in mammalian tumor cell lines (KBALB; R-970-5; 143B; EMT-6) and their counterparts engineered to express HSV-1 TK (KBALB-STK; 143B-LTK). Their HSV-1 TK selectivity indices ranged from one (nonselective) to one million (highly selective) based on cytotoxicity, with FIRU being the least toxic to all cell lines, and FIAU being most toxic. HSV-1 TK selectivity, based on uptake, ranged from 10 to 140, with IVDU being most selective for HSV-1 TK expressing cells, followed by IVFRU, FIRU, FIAU, IVFAU and finally IUDR. Phosphorylation of [(125)I]FIAU led to incorporation of the radiolabel into nucleic acids, whereas IVFRU and FIRU radioactivity was trapped primarily in the nucleotide pool. These data indicate that cytotoxicity does not depend on initial metabolic trapping (e.g., phosphorylation), but on elaboration of the mononucleotides to more cytotoxic anabolites. Lipophilicities and nucleoside transport rates of the six nucleosides tested were within narrow ranges. This supports the premise that cellular biochemistry, and not cellular bioavailability, is responsible for the observed broad range of cytotoxicity and trapping. In vivo biodistribution studies with 5-[(125)I]iodo-2'-fluoro-2'-deoxyribouridine (FIRU), 5-[(125)I]iodo-2'-fluoro-2'-deoxyarabinouridine (FIAU) and (E)-5-(2-[(125)I]iodovinyl)-2'-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine (IVFRU) demonstrate selective accumulation of all three radiotracers in HSV-1 TK-expressing KBABK-STK tumors, compared to their very low accumulation in the non-HSV-1 TK-expressing KBALB tumors, in Balb/c mice. In summary, these nucleosides are unpredictably cytotoxic to the various cell lines studied, and this unpredictability extends across the HSV-1 TK expression characteristic; their uptake by cells engineered to express HSV-1 TK is also dependent on the molecular construction of the gene cassette carrying the viral TK gene.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15219281     DOI: 10.1016/j.nucmedbio.2004.02.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucl Med Biol        ISSN: 0969-8051            Impact factor:   2.408


  3 in total

1.  Synthesis and in vitro evaluation of 5-[(18)f]fluoroalkyl pyrimidine nucleosides for molecular imaging of herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase reporter gene expression.

Authors:  Ann-Marie Chacko; Wenchao Qu; Hank F Kung
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2008-09-25       Impact factor: 7.446

2.  Comparison of [14C]FMAU, [3H]FEAU, [14C]FIAU, and [3H]PCV for monitoring reporter gene expression of wild type and mutant herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase in cell culture.

Authors:  Keon Wook Kang; Jung-Joon Min; Xiaoyuan Chen; Sanjiv S Gambhir
Journal:  Mol Imaging Biol       Date:  2005 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 3.488

Review 3.  Multimodality reporter gene imaging: Construction strategies and application.

Authors:  Mengting Li; Yichun Wang; Mei Liu; Xiaoli Lan
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2018-04-18       Impact factor: 11.556

  3 in total

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