Loss of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) has been observed in a variety of hu
man cancers, In addition to predisposing to oncogenesis, loss of MMR a
ctivity is of concern with respect to the use of chemotherapeutic agen
ts to treat established tumors, Loss of MMR results in drug resistance
directly by impairing the ability of the cell to detect DNA damage an
d activate apoptosis and indirectly by increasing the mutation rate th
roughout the genome, The MMR proteins are involved in mediating the ac
tivation of cell cycle checkpoints and apoptosis in response to DNA da
mage. MMR-deficient cells have been reported to be resistant to the me
thylating agents procarbazine and temozolomide, the alkylating agent b
usulfan, the platinum-containing drugs cisplatin and carboplatin, the
antimetabolite 6-thioguanine, and the topoisomerase II inhibitors etop
oside and doxorubicin. In the case of cisplatin, busulfan, temozolomid
e, and procarbazine, the degree of resistance has been shown to be suf
ficient to produce a large difference in clinical responsiveness in vi
vo in tumor model systems, The available preclinical data suggest that
tumors that contain a significant fraction of cells deficient in MMR
will demonstrate reduced responsiveness to specific drugs, The challen
ge now is to assess the clinical significance of the presence of defic
ient cells in tumors and to discover drugs that retain activity agains
t MMR-deficient cells.