Abstract

5-Fluorouracil (5-FU), used widely for malignancies, phosphorylate mostly by uracil phosphoribosyl transferase (UPRT). Patients with hereditary orotic aciduria lack the orotate phosphoribosyl transferase (OPRT) activity. In the cancer cells, the OPRT activity is paralleled with the UPRT activity. This study shows that the UPRT activity of the hereditary orotic aciduria homozygote decreased about 40% of normal controls. Moreover, we investigated the 5-FU cytotoxic effects on hereditary orotic aciduria (one homozygote, 4 heterozygotes and 7 normal controls), using EB-virus transformed lymphocytes (EB-LC). 5-FU was addded to the culture medium at concentrations ranging from 0 to 10.0 micromol/l. The 5-FU cytotoxic effects on the homozygote were milder than those on controls at each 5-FU concentration. The 5-FU cytotoxic effects in the heterozygotes were at intermediate levels between the homozygote and controls. We speculate that 5-FU cytotoxic effects, both anti-tumor effects and adverse reactions, would be weak when a patient with hereditary orotic aciduria was treated with 5-FU.

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