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Localization and Mechanism of Thymidine Transport in the Central Nervous System
Authors:Reynold Spector  William G Berlinger
Institution:Departments of Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Zowa, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract: The localization and mechanism of thymidine and deoxyuridine transport in the central nervous system were studied in vivo and in vitro . Previous studies have shown that thymidine enters brain from blood in part via the CSF. In vitro , isolated adult bovine cerebral microvessels, which readily concentrated and phosphorylated deoxyglucose, were unable to concentrate thymidine and deoxyuridine. In vivo , 3H]thymidine (0.2 μ M ) and 3H]deoxyuridine(0.4 μ M ) were not extracted more readily than 14C]sucrose in a single pass through the cerebral circulation of rats. In vivo , 3H]thyrnidine retention in CSF and brain after entry from blood was increased when the efflux of 3H]thymidine from CSF and the phosphorylation of 3H]thymidine in brain were depressed by the intraventricular injection of unlabeled thymidine. These studies and previous work suggest that the transfer of thymidine (and deoxyuridine) through the blood-brain barrier in either direction must be extremely low. The present studies are consistent with the postulate that thymidine is transported by an active transport system in the choroid plexus that transfers thymidine from blood into the CSF; from the CSF, the thymidine enters brain cells and is phosphorylated.
Keywords:Thymidine transport  Rabbit brain  Localization  Mechanism
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