Regeneration of the antiviral drug (E)-5-(2-bromovinyl)-2'-deoxyuridine in vivo.
Article 1984 en
Authors
CD
Claude Des̀granges
GR
G Razaka
FD
F Drouillet
Abstract
1 min read
The highly potent and selective antiherpes drug BVdUrd [(E)-5-(2-bromovinyl)-2'-deoxyuridine] is cleared within 2-3 hours from the bloodstream upon intraperitoneal administration to rats. It is degraded to BVUra [(E)-5-(2-bromovinyl)uracil] and this inactive metabolite is cleared very slowly from the bloodstream so that 24 hours after the administration of BVdUrd, BVUra is still detectable in the plasma. This contrasts with several other 5-substituted uracils, i.e. 5-fluorouracil, 5-iodouracil, 5-trifluorothymine and thymine itself, which are, like their 2'-deoxyuridine counterparts FdUrd, IdUrd, F3dThd and dThd, cleared from the plasma within 2-3 hours. The injection of dThd or any of the other 5-substituted 2'-deoxyuridines at 3 hours after the injection of BVdUrd, that is at a time when BVdUrd has disappeared completely from the circulation, results in the re-apparition of BVdUrd in the plasma. Apparently, BVdUrd is regenerated from BVUra following the reaction catalyzed by pyrimidine nucleoside phosphorylases : BVUra + dThd----BVdUrd + Thy. BVdUrd can even be generated de novo if dThd (or FdUrd, IdUrd or F3dThd) are administered 3 hours after a preceding injection of BVUra. These findings represent a unique example of the (re)generation of an active drug from its inactive metabolite in vivo.
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