In this study, we wanted to clarify the role of survivin-mediated survival signaling during G(2) and M in tumor cells treated with DNA-damaging agents. As a cellular model, we selected MOLT-4 human T-cell lymphoblastic leukemia cells that overexpress survivin and nonfunctional p53. Treatment with melphalan, a classic DNA-damaging agent, led to the induction of the DNA damage checkpoint and growth arrest in the G(2) phase of the cell cycle. Checkpoint abrogation by caffeine was accompanied by mitotic entry and rapid apoptotic cell death, whereas cells remaining in G(2) remained viable during the same time interval. Unexpectedly, when the spindle checkpoint was activated following G(2) abrogation, two different effects could be observed. If the microtubules of the melphalan-treated cells were destabilized by nocodazole, cells became arrested in prometaphase with low survivin levels and entered apoptosis. In contrast, if the microtubules of the melphalan-treated cells were stabilized by taxol, cells were still arrested in prometaphase, but apoptotic execution was inhibited. This effect is, most likely, directly mediated by survivin itself given its well-established antiapoptotic functions. In conclusion, depending on the way the spindle checkpoint was activated in cells with damaged DNA, cells could be either protected by survivin or die during mitosis. We suggest that the efficacy of DNA damage checkpoint abrogators used in combination with DNA-damaging agents may critically depend on whether DNA damage is able to invoke spindle checkpoint response and to activate survivin-associated survival signaling during mitosis.