Changes in the deoxyribonucleotide pools following a single oral administration of 13 mg/kg of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or of 64.8 mg/kg of UFT (a mixed compound of tegafur and uracil) were investigated. We compared their pharmacodynamics and effects on nucleotide metabolism in L1210 ascites tumor on day 3 after intraperitoneal tumor inoculation. The intracellular dTTP pool decreased to half the control level 1-6 hr after the administration of 5-FU. The dTTP pools rapidly recovered after 6 hr. In contrast, UFT kept the intracellular dTTP level to 1/3 to 1/2 of the control level for 24 hr. Either drug elevated the intracellular dATP pools, but decreased dCTP pools. UFT influenced the intracellular dATP and dCTP levels longer than 5-FU. Orally administered UFT seemed to exert a longer and more potent inhibitory effect on thymidylate synthetase than equimolar 5-FU. In view of these results, we suggest that UFT could be a more potent chemotherapeutic drug than 5-FU in oral administration.
Previous work in our laboratory showed that UFT (mixed compound of tegafur and uracil, molar ratio 1:4, respectively) caused the prolonged reduction of dTTP in L1210 leukemia cells in comparison with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of UFT on cell cycle distribution and thymidylate synthase activity of a leukemia cell line as compared with 5-FU. UFT and 5-FU were orally given to BDF1 mice bearing L1210 ascites tumor on day 3 after the tumor inoculation. Cell cycle distribution patterns at 24 hr after the drug administration showed a higher percentage of S phase in tumor cells treated with UFT than in those treated with 5-FU. Until 6 hr after the oral administration of the drugs, UFT inhibited the incorporation of [3H] deoxyuridine into DNA more long than 5-FU did. These results indicated that UFT has longer and stronger inhibitory effects on DNA replication than 5-FU in vivo under the employed experimental conditions (i.e., low and single doses of these fluorinated pyrimidines).
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