Gemcitabine and nucleos(t)ide synthesis inhibitors are broad-spectrum antiviral drugs that activate innate immunity

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Abstract

Nucleoside analogs have been frequently identified as antiviral agents. In recent years, gemcitabine, a cytidine analog in clinical use for the treatment of many solid tumors, was also shown to have antiviral activity against a broad range of viruses. Nucleoside analogs generally interfere with cellular nucleos(t)ide synthesis pathways, resulting in the depletion or imbalance of (d)NTP pools. Intriguingly, a few recent reports have shown that some nucleoside analogs, including gemcitabine, activated innate immunity, inducing the expression of interferon-stimulated genes, through nucleos(t)ide synthesis inhibition. The precise crosstalk between these two independent processes remains to be determined. Nonetheless, we summarize the current knowledge of nucleos(t)ide synthesis inhibition-related innate immunity and propose it as a newly emerging antiviral mechanism of nucleoside analogs.

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Shin, H. J., Kim, C., & Cho, S. (2018, April 20). Gemcitabine and nucleos(t)ide synthesis inhibitors are broad-spectrum antiviral drugs that activate innate immunity. Viruses. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/v10040211

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