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Dideoxycytidine,an anti-HIV drug,selectively inhibits growth but not phosphatidylcholine metabolism in neuroblastoma and glioma cells
Authors:Harold W. Cook  Matthew W. Spence
Affiliation:(1) Atlantic Research Centre for Mental Retardation, Departments of Pediatrics and Biochemistry, Dalhousie University, B3H 4H7 Halifax, NS, Canada
Abstract:Dideoxycytidine (ddCyd), an inhibitor of AIDS-related HIV, has been examined for effects on cell proliferation and phosphatidylcholine synthesis in tumor lines of nervous system origin. Uptake and metabolism of [3H]ddCyd, observed in all cells, was greatest in one human neuroblastoma line, HTB-10. Growth of the HTB-10 line was markedly inhibited by 40 mgrM ddCyd, whereas growth of C6 glioma and N1E-115 or HTB-11 neuroblastoma cells was unaltered. Phosphatidylcholine synthesis in the presence or absence of stimulation by phorbol ester was not specifically altered by ddCyd. Thus, ddCyd was incorporated and inhibited growth in a cell-specific manner but had little effect on cytidine-dependent phospholipid synthesis. This suggests that some cells derived from the nervous system may be more susceptible than others with respect to the positive and negative effects of ddCyd as a potential antiviral drug.
Keywords:Dideoxycytidine  neuroblastoma  glioma  phosphatidylcholine  AIDS drugs  phospholipids
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