Enzyme-prodrug therapy using ganciclovir and herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) has demonstrated excellent antitumor activity in many different types of malignant cells. Previously, we noted that ganciclovir was substantially more cytotoxic than other HSV-TK substrates. Therefore, we embarked on a study to determine the basis for the superior cytotoxicity of ganciclovir. In U251tk human glioblastoma cells that stably express HSV-TK, ganciclovir elicited a >4 log cell kill instead of the ≤1.5 log cell kill mediated by two other HSV-TK substrates, 1-β-d-arabinofuranosylthymine (araT) and acyclovir. Study of the metabolism of these drugs demonstrated that acyclovir was poorly phosphorylated to its active triphosphate with DNA incorporation below the limit of detection, which may explain the <1 log cell kill in these cells. Lower levels of ganciclovir triphosphate accumulated compared with araT triphosphate (araTTP) under conditions that induced ≥1 log cell kill (67 versus 1235 pmol/107 cells, respectively), and the half-life for the triphosphate of ganciclovir was shorter than that of araT (terminal half-lives of 15 and 41 h, respectively). Incorporation of ganciclovir monophosphate into DNA was less than that of araT monophosphate, and both analogues were retained in DNA for ≥48 h. Thus, the superior cytotoxicity of ganciclovir was not due to enhanced metabolism to active forms. Highly cytotoxic concentrations of ganciclovir produced only weak inhibition of DNA synthesis. This allowed cells to proceed through S and G2-M phases during and after drug exposure, resulting in a doubling of cell number by 48 h after drug washout. As they attempted to progress through the cell cycle a second time, ganciclovir-treated cells accumulated in early S-phase and remained there until cell death, suggesting that ganciclovir incorporation in the DNA template was important for cytotoxicity. In contrast, strong inhibition of DNA synthesis by araTTP prevented cells from traversing the cell cycle for at least 12 h after drug washout, when the active metabolite was largely degraded. araT-treated cells were unable to divide for at least 72 h after drug exposure, at which point the surviving cells displayed a normal cell cycle distribution pattern. Based on the results presented here, we propose a novel paradigm in which the ability of ganciclovir to incorporate into DNA without inhibiting progression through S-phase, combined with high cytotoxicity for incorporated ganciclovir monophosphate, produces multilog cytotoxicity.

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This work was supported in part by Grants CA46452, CA76581, and Training Grant GM-07767 from the NIH.

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