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Title: S-acyl-2-thioethyl (SATE) pronucleotides are potent inhibitors of HIV-1 replication in T-lymphoid cells cross-resistant to deoxycytidine and thymidine analogs. Author: Gröschel B, Cinatl J, Périgaud C, Gosselin G, Imbach JL, Doerr HW, Cinatl J. Journal: Antiviral Res; 2002 Feb; 53(2):143-52. PubMed ID: 11750940. Abstract: The biological evaluation of mononucleotide prodrugs (pronucleotides) of various nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) such as zidovudine (AZT), zalcitabine (ddC) and lamivudine (3TC) was reported in human T-lymphoid MOLT-4/8 cells which were grown continuously for more than 1 year in a medium containing cytarabine (Ara-C). In this cell line, expression of deoxycytidine kinase (dCK) and thymidine kinase 1 (TK1) was decreased in comparison to parental cells (3.8 and 2.9-fold, respectively). The lower mRNA level of TK1 correlated significantly with lower enzyme activity, whereas no dCK activity was detectable. In Ara-C-resistant cells, anti-HIV-1 effects of ddC, 3TC and AZT were more than 100-fold lower compared with parental cells. In contrast, the corresponding mononucleoside phosphotriesters bearing S-acyl-2-thioethyl (SATE) groups as biolabile phosphate protection retained anti-HIV-1 activity due to their ability to bypass the first monophosphorylation step catalyzed by dCK or TK1. The results demonstrate that in vitro selection of T-lymphoid cells in the presence of Ara-C results in cross-resistance to deoxycytidine (ddC, 3TC) and thymidine (AZT) analogs and that these cellular resistance mechanisms can be bypassed by the use of bis(SATE) pronucleotides.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]