본문으로 건너뛰기
← 뒤로

Molecular actions of sepantronium bromide (YM155) on survivin-dependent cell death in cancer and beyond.

Chemico-biological interactions 2026 Vol.427() p. 111951

Marques SSA, Oliveira MET, França-Lara ÉG, Menuzzi CK, Oliveira AS, Santos MA, Zischler LFCM, Moreno-Amaral AN, Elifio-Esposito S

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Sepantronium bromide (YM155) emerged as one of the earliest small molecules designed to selectively suppress survivin (BIRC5), a key regulator of apoptosis and cell-cycle progression in cancer.

이 논문을 인용하기

BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Marques SSA, Oliveira MET, et al. (2026). Molecular actions of sepantronium bromide (YM155) on survivin-dependent cell death in cancer and beyond.. Chemico-biological interactions, 427, 111951. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cbi.2026.111951
MLA Marques SSA, et al.. "Molecular actions of sepantronium bromide (YM155) on survivin-dependent cell death in cancer and beyond.." Chemico-biological interactions, vol. 427, 2026, pp. 111951.
PMID 41616904

Abstract

Sepantronium bromide (YM155) emerged as one of the earliest small molecules designed to selectively suppress survivin (BIRC5), a key regulator of apoptosis and cell-cycle progression in cancer. Over the past two decades, YM155 has provided a unique translational framework to investigate the molecular crosstalk between survivin, cellular stress responses, and therapy resistance that shape cell-death outcomes. This mini-review integrates preclinical and clinical data to delineate how YM155 modulates transcriptional networks, mitochondrial integrity, DNA damage signaling, and autophagy. Particular attention is given to adaptive redox and metabolic programs that limit its efficacy in solid and hematological tumors. The article also revisits the outcomes of early clinical trials, highlighting both the safety profile and the challenges that hindered durable patient responses. Beyond oncology, emerging findings have repositioned YM155 as a probe to interrogate survivin-regulated processes in vascular and immune pathologies. By bridging molecular and clinical evidence, this review contextualizes YM155 within the broader landscape of targeted small molecules, emphasizing its value as a model for developing next-generation survivin modulators and precision-based therapeutic strategies.

MeSH Terms

Humans; Naphthoquinones; Survivin; Neoplasms; Imidazoles; Antineoplastic Agents; Animals; Apoptosis; Autophagy