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Vol. 57, Issue 4, 811-819, April 2000
Rega Institute for Medical Research, Leuven, Belgium (J.B., B.D.,
S.H., E.D.C.); Department of Biology, Zoological Institute, Leuven,
Belgium (M.B., R.H.); and the Karolinska Institute, Huddinge University
Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden (A.K.)
The antiherpetic agent
(E)-5-(2-bromovinyl)-2'-deoxyuridine (BVDU) was found to
be an efficient substrate for recombinant Drosophila
melanogaster-deoxyribonucleoside kinase with a
Km of 4.5 µM and a
Vmax of 400 nmol/µg protein/h compared
with 1.3 µM and 62.5 nmol/µg protein/h, respectively, for the
natural substrate thymidine. Mammalian cytosolic thymidine kinase-1
does not recognize BVDU as a substrate. In sharp contrast to mammalian
cells, the insect D. melanogaster and Spodoptera
frugiperda (Sf) embryonic cells proved highly sensitive to the
cytostatic action of BVDU. BVDU was efficiently metabolized to its
5'-mono-, 5'-di- and 5'-triphosphate derivatives in the insect cell
cultures and abundantly incorporated into the insect cell DNA. BVDU
prevented the D. melanogaster cells to initiate the S
phase of their cell cycle, and exposure of S. frugiperda cells to BVDU led to a dose-dependent retardation of the insect cells in the S phase of their cell cycle. Both inhibition of
nucleic acid synthesis (through the 5'-triphosphate of BVDU) and
inhibition of thymidylate synthase (through the 5'-monophosphate of
BVDU) would account for the cytostatic activity of BVDU against the
insect cells. Because of the virtual lack of cytotoxicity of BVDU
against mammalian cells, the drug should be considered highly selective
in its cytostatic action against the insect cells. When added to the
food of S. frugiperda larvae, BVDU caused a remarkable
decrease in the weight gain of the larvae and heavily compromised the
transformation of the larvae to the pupae and their subsequent adult
(moth) phase. Our data indicate that insect multifunctional
deoxyribonucleoside kinase should be considered an entirely novel and
attractive target in the development of new nucleoside types of highly
selective insecticidal drugs.
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