Summary We studied the effects of 5-ethynyluracil (GW776), a potent inactivator of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase, on the metabolism of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), in particular with respect to formation of the toxic compounds fluoroacetate (FAC) and 2-fluoro-3-hydroxypropionic acid (FHPA), using fluorine-19 nuclear magnetic resonance and the isolated perfused rat liver model. Livers were perfused with 5-FU alone at a dose of 15 mg kg-' body weight or with 5-FU + GW776 at doses of 15 mg 5-FU kg-' body weight and 0.5 mg GW776 kg-' body weight injected 1 h before 5-FU. All 5-FU was metabolized in experiments with 5-FU alone whereas unmetabolized 5-FU represented 94% of the fluorinated compounds measured in experiments with 5-FU + GW776. GW776 modulated both the catabolic and the anabolic pathways of 5-FU, the most striking effect being on the degradative pathway. The amount of 5-FU catabolites decreased by a factor of 27 in the presence of GW776. The modulator led to a decrease in a-fluoro-3-alanine (FBAL) formation by a factor of approximately 110, while fluoride ion formation decreased by a factor of approximately 10. By strongly lowering the metabolism of 5-FU into FBAL, GW776 circumvented the transformation of FBAL into toxic FAC and FHPA. 5-FU anabolites increased by a factor of approximately 7 in the presence of GW776. The level of free fluoronucleotides and 5-fluorouridine-5'-diphosphate sugars was increased up to fivefold. No incorporation of 5-FU into RNA could be measured in experiments with 5-FU alone whereas, although low (0.1% of 5-FU injected dose), it was detectable in experiments with 5-FU + GW776. These results suggest that GW776 may be useful for attenuating the not very common but serious cardiotoxic and/or neurotoxic side-effects of 5-FU that are probably due to FBAL metabolites.Keywords: 5-fluorouracil; 5-ethynyluracil (GW776); 19F nuclear magnetic resonance; modulation of 5-fluorouracil metabolism; fluoroacetate; 2-fluoro-3-hydroxypropionic acid; isolated perfused rat liver 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) is one of the most commonly used anticancer agents for treatment of solid tumours. Common clinical adverse reactions include myelosuppression, diarrhoea, vomiting and mucositis. Over the last decade, the number of reports of cardiotoxicity and neurotoxicity attributed to 5-FU has rapidly increased (Anand, 1994;Yeh and Cheng, 1994; and references cited therein). The biochemical mechanism underlying these toxic side-effects remains unclear, although it has been postulated that 5-FU, and more precisely its main catabolite ex-fluoro-p-alanine (FBAL) (Mukherjee and Heidelberger, 1960;Bemadou et al, 1985; Heggie et al, 1987; Hull et al, 1988), might be transformed into fluoroacetate (FAC) (Koenig and Patel, 1970), a highly cardiotoxic and neurotoxic poison (Pattison and Peters, 1966). We demonstrated on the isolated perfused rabbit heart model that commercial solutions of 5-FU contain cardiotoxic impurities, namely fluoromalonic acid semialdehyde (FMASAld) and fluoroacetaldehyde (Facet), that are derived from...