Unlabelled: The basis for the use of nucleoside tracers in PET is that activity of the cell-growth-dependent enzyme thymidine kinase 1 is the rate-limiting factor driving tracer retention in tumors. Recent publications suggest that nucleoside transporters might influence uptake and thereby affect the tracer signal in vivo. Understanding transport mechanisms for different nucleoside PET tracers is important for evaluating clinical results. This study examined the relative role of different nucleoside transport mechanisms in uptake and retention of [methyl-(3)H]-3'-deoxy-3'-fluorothymidine ((3)H-FLT), [methyl-(3)H]-thymidine ((3)H-thymidine), and (3)H-1-(2-deoxy-2-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl)-5-methyluracil ((3)H-FMAU).

Methods: Transport of (3)H-FLT, (3)H-thymidine, and (3)H-FMAU was examined in a single human adenocarcinoma cell line, A549, under both nongrowth and exponential-growth conditions.

Results: (3)H-Thymidine transport was dominated by human equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1 (hENT1) under both growth conditions. (3)H-FLT was also transported by hENT1, but passive diffusion dominated its transport. (3)H-FMAU transport was dominated by human equilibrative nucleoside transporter 2. Cell membrane levels of hENT1 increased in cells under exponential growth, and this increase was associated with a more rapid rate of uptake for both (3)H-thymidine and (3)H-FLT. (3)H-FMAU transport was not affected by changes in growth conditions. All 3 tracers concentrated in the plateau phase, nonproliferating cells at levels many-fold greater than their concentration in buffer, in part because of low levels of nucleoside metabolism, which inhibited tracer efflux.

Conclusion: Transport mechanisms are not the same for (3)H-thymidine, (3)H-FLT, and (3)H-FMAU. Levels of hENT1, an important transporter of (3)H-FLT and (3)H-thymidine, increase as proliferating cells enter the cell cycle.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3368522PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.110.076794DOI Listing

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Unlabelled: The basis for the use of nucleoside tracers in PET is that activity of the cell-growth-dependent enzyme thymidine kinase 1 is the rate-limiting factor driving tracer retention in tumors. Recent publications suggest that nucleoside transporters might influence uptake and thereby affect the tracer signal in vivo. Understanding transport mechanisms for different nucleoside PET tracers is important for evaluating clinical results.

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The usefulness of radiolabeled 3'-fluoro-3'-deoxythymidine (FLT), a thymidine derivative with affinity to cytoplasmic thymidine kinase 1 (TK1), as a tumor proliferation marker was evaluated using [3H]FLT and 22 cultured tumor cell lines. Asynchronously growing tumor cells were used for studies to mimic in vivo status of tumors. FLT uptake in each cell line was compared with [3H]thymidine ([3H]Thd) uptake and %S-phase fraction, both known as acceptable markers of proliferation.

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