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Title: In vivo and in vitro pharmacologic activity of the purine nucleoside phosphorylase inhibitor BCX-34: the role of GTP and dGTP. Author: Bantia S, Montgomery JA, Johnson HG, Walsh GM. Journal: Immunopharmacology; 1996 Oct; 35(1):53-63. PubMed ID: 8913795. Abstract: BCX-34 inhibits RBC PNP in vitro from humans, rats, and mice with IC50S ranging from 5 to 36 nM. BCX-34 also, in the presence but not in the absence of deoxyguanosine, inhibits human CCRF-CEM T-cell proliferation with an IC50 of 0.57 microM but not rat or mouse T-cell proliferation up to 30 microM. Inhibition of human T-cell proliferation is accompanied by an accumulation of intracellular dGTP with an associated reduction in GTP. These nucleotide changes do not occur in BC16A mouse T-cells and explain why proliferation is not inhibited by PNP inhibitors in this case. Reduction in intracellular GTP is not essential for the antiproliferative action of BCX-34. Oral bioavailability of BCX-34 in rats is 76%. BCX-34 is orally active in elevating plasma inosine in rats (2-fold at 30 mg/kg), in suppressing ex vivo RBC PNP activity in rats (98% at 3 h. 100 mg/kg), and in suppressing ex vivo skin PNP in mice (39% at 3 h, 100 mg/kg). The results demonstrate that BCX-34 inhibits human PNP and T-cell proliferation, is orally bioavailable in rodents, and pharmacologically active in vivo in rodents after oral dosing with no apparent side effects or toxicity. BCX-34 may, therefore, be useful in treating human T-cell proliferative inflammatory disorders.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]