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Article Abstract

Drug resistance has a major impact on the treatment of several cancers. This is mainly due to the overexpression of cellular drug efflux proteins. Hence, drug-delivery systems that can avoid this resistance are needed. We report PR10, a progesterone-cationic lipid conjugate, as a self-assembling nanoaggregate that delivers a drug cargo of etoposide, a topoisomerase inhibitor, selectively to cancer cells. In this study, we observed that etoposide nanoaggregates (P : E) caused selective and enhanced toxicity in etoposide-resistant CT26 cancer cells (IC 9 μM) compared to when etoposide (IC >20 μM) was used alone. Concurrently, no toxicity was observed in etoposide-sensitive HEK293 cells for P : E treatment (IC >20 μM). The P : E-treated cancer cells seem to have no effect on ABCB1 expression, but etoposide-treated cells exhibited a twofold increase in ABCB1 expression, a potent efflux protein for several xenobiotic compounds. This observation supports the notion that the enhanced toxicity of P : E nanoaggregates is due to their ability to keep the expression of ABCB1 low, thus allowing longer intracellular residence of etoposide. In a BALB/c orthotopic colorectal cancer model, the nanoaggregates led to enhanced survival (45 days) compared to etoposide-treated mice (39 days). These findings suggest that PR10 could be used as a potential cancer-selective etoposide delivery vehicle to treat several etoposide-resistant cancers with fewer side effects due to the nonspecific toxicity of the drug.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbic.202200650DOI Listing

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