Abstract
The effect of thymidine and deoxyadenosine on the antiviral and antibacterial effect of zidovudine was studied in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. In quantitative assays, 10 micrograms mL-1 thymidine was shown to increase the 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of zidovudine for HIV-1 by approximately 100-fold and to reduce zidovudine (1 microM)-induced protection of C8166 cells from 2.04 to 0.18 log syncytial-forming units. Thymidine also antagonized the antibacterial effect of zidovudine for two E. coli and three S. typhimurium species in a dose-dependent manner; 10 micrograms mL-1 of thymidine increased the minimum inhibitory concentration of zidovudine for E. coli strains by 10-40-fold and for S. typhimurium strains by three-fold. Deoxyadenosine reduced the minimum inhibitory concentration of zidovudine against all five bacterial strains but had no effect on the IC50 of zidovudine for HIV-1, nor did it significantly reverse the antagonism of the antibacterial and antiviral activity of thymidine. The induction of the SOS response in E. coli was reversed in a dose-dependent manner by thymidine while the presence of deoxyadenosine increased induction of the SOS response by zidovudine at suboptimal concentrations.
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