Signaling Pathways
Signal transduction pathways constitute a precisely regulated network through which cells perceive external stimuli and initiate intracellular responses. Core research in this field focuses on the mechanisms of molecular signal transmission and regulation within cells and typically encompasses three fundamental stages: signal initiation, signal propagation through cascades, and downstream effector responses. Key molecules—including proteins, nucleic acids, and small molecules—interact with high specificity and are subject to tight regulation (e.g., protein phosphorylation, molecular activation/inhibition). These processes underpin the full spectrum of cellular activities, including proliferation, differentiation, metabolism, apoptosis, and immune responses. While accurate regulation of these pathways is essential for maintaining organismal homeostasis, their dysregulation is a major driver of the onset and progression of diseases such as cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, and autoimmune diseases.
APExBIO is strongly committed to advancing life science research by providing a comprehensive portfolio of small-molecule tools designed to support the elucidation of signaling mechanisms and the identification of key regulatory targets—critical steps for deciphering disease etiology and developing innovative therapies. Our offerings span all major signal transduction pathways, including classical pathways (e.g., PI3K/Akt, MAPK, NF-κB), emerging modalities (e.g., ferroptosis, cuproptosis, pyroptosis), and research on pathway crosstalk. With tens of thousands of products—including inhibitors, activators, and modulators—we robustly support research in oncology, immunology, neuroscience, epigenetics, and other key fields.
Every APExBIO product undergoes rigorous functional validation and purity testing, ensuring suitability for diverse research applications such as pathway mechanism studies, target identification and validation, drug activity evaluation, cell-based assays, and animal model development. We complement our high-quality tools with comprehensive support: each product is supplied with detailed chemical property reports, biological activity data, standardized usage guidelines, and extensive literature citations in high-impact journals. In addition, we provide end-to-end assistance—from product selection and experimental protocol optimization to technical troubleshooting—enabling researchers to rely on tool quality, focus on core scientific questions, and accelerate progress in signal transduction research and translational medicine.
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BA3073 FusicoccinSummary: Fusicoccin (FusicoccinA), a fungal septic toxin and stabilizer of protein interactions. -
BA3074 NortriptylineSummary: ortriptyline (Desmethylamitriptyline) is the main active metabolite of mitriptyline, a tricyclic antidepressant. -
BA3075 CID5721353Summary: CID5721353 is an inhibitor. -
BA3076 MIR96-IN-1Summary: MIR96-IN-1 targets the Drosha site in the hairpin precursor structure, inhibits its biogenesis, as well as inhibits downstream targets, and triggers apoptosis in breast cancer cells. -
BA3077 JAB-2485Summary: JAB-2485 is a potent and selective aurora kinase A inhibitor. -
BA3078 MPT0E028Summary: MPT0E028 is an orally active, selective inhibitor. -
BA3079 TefinostatSummary: Tefinostat (CHR-2845) is a monocyte/macrophage-targeted histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor. -
BA3080 SM-433Summary: SM-433 is a Smac mimetic that functions as an inhibitor of apoptosis-inhibiting proteins. -
BA3081 Thalidomide-O-C6-COOHSummary: Thalidomide-O-C6-COOH is a synthetic E3 ligase ligand-linker coupler. -
BA3082 MTR-106Summary: MTR-106 is an orally effective G-quadruplex stabilizer and RNA polymerase I inhibitor.

