Content area

Abstract

Survivin is a well-established target in experimental cancer therapy. The molecule is over-expressed in most human tumors, but hardly detectable in normal tissues. Multiple functions in different subcellular compartments have been assigned. It participates in the control of cell division, apoptosis, the cellular stress response, and also in the regulation of cell migration and metastasis. Survivin expression has been recognized as a biomarker: high expression indicates an unfavorable prognosis and resistance to chemotherapeutic agents and radiation treatment. Survivin is an unconventional drug target and several indirect approaches have been exploited to affect its function and the phenotype of survivin-expressing cells. Interference with the expression of the survivin gene, the utilization of its messenger RNA, the intracellular localization, the interaction with binding partners, the stability of the survivin protein, and the induction of survivin-specific immune responses have been taken into consideration. A direct strategy to inhibit survivin has been based on the identification of a specifically interacting peptide.

Details

Title
Targeting Survivin in Cancer: Novel Drug Development Approaches
Author
Groner, Bernd; Weiss, Astrid
Pages
27-39
Section
REVIEW ARTICLE
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Feb 2014
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
11738804
e-ISSN
1179190X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1566329416
Copyright
Copyright Wolters Kluwer Health Adis International Feb 2014