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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Intracellular metabolism of 2',3'-dideoxynucleosides in duck hepatocyte primary cultures.

The intracellular fate of the potent duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) inhibitor 2,6-diaminopurine 2',3'-dideoxyriboside (ddDAPR), its deamination product 2',3'-dideoxyguanosine (ddG), and the less effective DHBV-inhibitor 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) was investigated in duck hepatocyte primary cultures. After a 1-min exposure of [3H]ddDAPR to duck blood, 95% of the compound was converted to ddG. Similarly, [3H]ddDAPR was converted rapidly to ddG in duck hepatocyte primary cultures, with ddG exhibiting resistance to further catabolism. The major pathway of ddG utilization in these cells was phosphorylation, yielding a concentration of 2.1 and 1.9 microM total ddG nucleotides after 5 and 26 hr, respectively, of exposure to 4 microM ddG. Removal of exogenous ddG led to a rapid (T1/2 = 1.6 hr) decrease in the total intracellular ddG nucleotide pools. Duck hepatocytes treated with 4 microM ddC exhibited a time-dependent accumulation of ddC nucleotides, culminating in a maximum intracellular total ddC nucleotide concentration of 1.4 microM after 24-26 hr. The intracellular total ddC nucleotide level decreased with a T1/2 of 4.4 hr following the removal of exogenous ddC. The formation of ddC nucleotides was reduced in the presence of excess 2'-dideoxycytidine implicating deoxycytidine kinase in the initial step of ddC phosphorylation. A 25-fold excess of 2'-deoxycytidine had no effect on ddG phosphorylation in duck hepatocytes. However, a 92% inhibition of ddG nucleotide formation occurred in duck hepatocytes treated for 5 hr with 4 microM [3H]dG + 100 microM adenosine in the presence of the adenosine deaminase inhibitor 2'-deoxycoformycin, suggesting that, in these cells, adenosine kinase is involved in the ddG phosphorylation process.[1]

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