Abstract

Progesterone (PR) is an endogenous steroid hormone that activates the progesterone receptor (PgR) and is known to play a critical role in cancer progression. Herein, we report the development of cationic lipid-conjugated PR derivatives by covalently conjugating progesterone with cationic lipids of varying hydrocarbon chain lengths (n = 6-18) through a succinate linker. Cytotoxicity studies performed on eight different cancer cell lines reveal that PR10, one of the lead derivatives, exerts notable toxicity (IC50 = 4-12 μM) in cancer cells irrespective of their PgR expression status and remains largely nontoxic to noncancerous cells. Mechanistic studies show that PR10 induces G2/M-phase cell cycle arrest in cancer cells, leading to apoptosis and cell death by inhibiting the PI3K/AKT cell survival pathway and p53 upregulation. Further, in vivo study shows that PR10 treatment significantly reduces melanoma tumor growth and prolongs the overall survival of melanoma tumor-bearing C57BL/6J mice. Interestingly, PR10 readily forms stable self-aggregates of ∼190 nm size in an aqueous environment and exhibits selective uptake into cancerous cell lines. In vitro uptake mechanism studies in various cell lines (cancerous cell lines B16F10, MCF7, PC3, and noncancerous cell line HEK293) using endocytosis inhibition proves that PR10 nanoaggregates enter selectively into the cancer cells predominantly using macropinocytosis and/or caveolae-mediated endocytosis. Overall, this study highlights the development of a self-aggregating cationic derivative of progesterone with anticancer activity, and its cancer cell-selective accumulation in nanoaggregate form holds great potential in the field of targeted drug delivery.

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