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abstract
The
majority of Lynch syndrome (LS), also known as hereditary non-polyposis
colorectal cancer (HNPCC), has been linked to heterozygous defects in
DNA mismatch repair (MMR). MMR is a highly conserved pathway that
recognizes and repairs polymerase misincorporation errors and nucleotide
damage as well as functioning as a damage sensor that signals
apoptosis. Loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) that retains the mutant MMR
allele and epigenetic silencing of MMR genes are associated with an
increased mutation rate that drives carcinogenesis as well as
microsatellite instability that is a hallmark of LS/HNPCC. Understanding
the biophysical functions of the MMR components is crucial to
elucidating the role of MMR in human tumorigenesis and determining the
pathogenetic consequences of patients that present in the clinic with an
uncharacterized variant of the MMR genes. We summarize the historical
association between LS/HNPCC and MMR, discuss the mechanism of the MMR
and finally examine the functional analysis of MMR defects found in
LS/HNPCC patients and their relationship with the severity of the
disease.
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