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Review
. 2004 Feb;15(2):113-8.
doi: 10.1097/00001813-200402000-00003.

SR31747A: a peripheral sigma ligand with potent antitumor activities

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Review

SR31747A: a peripheral sigma ligand with potent antitumor activities

Pierre Casellas et al. Anticancer Drugs. 2004 Feb.

Abstract

SR31747A is currently being evaluated in phase IIb clinical trials for prostate cancer treatment. The molecule is a peripheral sigma ligand that binds four proteins in human cells, i.e. SRBP-1, sigma-2, HSI and its relative SRBP-2. SR31747A is a dual agent with both immunomodulatory and antiproliferative activities. The molecule blocks proliferation of human and mouse lymphocytes, modulates the expression of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, and was shown to protect animals in vivo against acute and chronic inflammatory conditions such as acute graft-versus-host reaction, lethality induced by staphylococcal enterotoxin B and lipopolysaccharide or rheumatoid arthritis. Besides these immunomodulatory activities, the molecule also inhibits the proliferation of various tumor cell lines in vitro in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. In vivo, SR31747A has potent antitumoral activity as demonstrated against mammary and prostatic tumoral cell lines injected into nude mice, where both tumor incidence and growth were decreased by more than 40% following daily SR31747A treatment at 25 mg/kg i.p. The recent literature on SR31747A in cancer is reviewed here. We focus specifically on preclinical data obtained in vivo and on studies aimed at deciphering the mode of action of the molecule.

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