Abstract

Although the resistance to the cytotoxic response of certain DNA damaging agents has been well characterized in cells deficient in mismatch repair, little is known about how such resistance affects mutagenesis. Using human cancer cell lines defective in mismatch repair (MMR) and complementary cell lines in which the MMR defects were corrected by chromosome transfer, we present the cytotoxic effect and the mutagenic response at the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) locus following exposure to the chemotherapeutic agent, 6-thioguanine (6-TG). Upon exposure to 6-TG, there was a differential cytotoxic response. The MMR-deficient cells were resistant to 6-TG exposure up to 5 microM, whereas the MMR-proficient cell lines were significantly more sensitive at the same levels of exposure. Furthermore, the mutagenic response at HPRT induced by 6-TG was substantially increased in the MMR-deficient lines relative to the MMR-proficient cell lines. These findings support the notion that cytotoxicity to 6-TG is mediated through functional MMR and that resistance to the cytotoxic effects of 6-TG is directly associated with an increase in induced mutations in MMR-defective cells. These data suggest that the use of 6-TG as a chemotherapeutic agent may result in the selection of MMR-defective cells, thereby predisposing the patient to an increased risk for developing secondary tumors.

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