Publication | Open Access
Dependence of the Cytotoxicity of DNA-Damaging Agents on the Mismatch Repair Status of Human Cells
116
Citations
19
References
2004
Year
Dna DamageDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyCell DeathPathologyMmr DeficiencyDrug ResistanceHuman CellsRadiation OncologyMismatch Repair StatusCancer ResearchHealth SciencesGenome InstabilityOncogenic AgentDna ReplicationDna-damaging AgentsCell BiologyPhotocarcinogenesisMedicineMismatch RepairMmr StatusMutagenesis
Mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency was reported to increase resistance of mammalian cells to killing by several genotoxic substances. However, although MMR-deficient cells are approximately 100-fold more resistant to killing by S(N)1 type methylating agents than MMR-proficient controls, the sensitivity differences reported for the other agents were typically <2-fold. To test whether these differences were linked to factors other than MMR status, we studied the cytotoxicities of mitomycin C, chloroethylcyclohexyl nitrosourea, melphalan, psoralen-UVA, etoposide, camptothecin, ionizing radiation, and cis-dichlorodiaminoplatinum (cisplatin) in a strictly isogenic system. We now report that MMR deficiency reproducibly desensitized cells solely to cisplatin.
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