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Adult murine prostate basal and luminal cells are self-sustained lineages that can both serve as targets for prostate cancer initiation.


ABSTRACT: The prostate epithelial lineage hierarchy and the cellular origin for prostate cancer remain inadequately defined. Using a lineage-tracing approach, we show that adult rodent prostate basal and luminal cells are independently self-sustained in vivo. Disrupting the tumor suppressor Pten in either lineage led to prostate cancer initiation. However, the cellular composition and onset dynamics of the resulting tumors are distinctive. Prostate luminal cells are more responsive to Pten null-induced mitogenic signaling. In contrast, basal cells are resistant to direct transformation. Instead, loss of Pten activity induces the capability of basal cells to differentiate into transformation-competent luminal cells. Our study suggests that deregulation of epithelial differentiation is a critical step for the initiation of prostate cancers of basal cell origin.

SUBMITTER: Choi N 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3285423 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Adult murine prostate basal and luminal cells are self-sustained lineages that can both serve as targets for prostate cancer initiation.

Choi Nahyun N   Zhang Boyu B   Zhang Li L   Ittmann Michael M   Xin Li L  

Cancer cell 20120201 2


The prostate epithelial lineage hierarchy and the cellular origin for prostate cancer remain inadequately defined. Using a lineage-tracing approach, we show that adult rodent prostate basal and luminal cells are independently self-sustained in vivo. Disrupting the tumor suppressor Pten in either lineage led to prostate cancer initiation. However, the cellular composition and onset dynamics of the resulting tumors are distinctive. Prostate luminal cells are more responsive to Pten null-induced mi  ...[more]

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