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1.
Am J Pathol ; 194(1): 30-51, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37827216

RESUMO

Benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) is caused by the nonmalignant enlargement of the transition zone of the prostate gland, leading to lower urinary tract symptoms. Although current medical treatments are unsatisfactory in many patients, the limited understanding of the mechanisms driving disease progression prevents the development of alternative therapeutic strategies. The probasin-prolactin (Pb-PRL) transgenic mouse recapitulates many histopathological features of human BPH. Herein, these alterations parallel urodynamic disturbance reminiscent of lower urinary tract symptoms. Single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis of Pb-PRL mouse prostates revealed that their epithelium mainly includes low-androgen signaling cell populations analogous to Club/Hillock cells enriched in the aged human prostate. These intermediate cells are predicted to result from the reprogramming of androgen-dependent luminal cells. Pb-PRL mouse prostates exhibited increased vulnerability to oxidative stress due to reduction of antioxidant enzyme expression. One-month treatment of Pb-PRL mice with anethole trithione (ATT), a specific inhibitor of mitochondrial ROS production, reduced prostate weight and voiding frequency. In human BPH-1 epithelial cells, ATT decreased mitochondrial metabolism, cell proliferation, and stemness features. ATT prevented the growth of organoids generated by sorted Pb-PRL basal and LSCmed cells, the two major BPH-associated, androgen-independent epithelial cell compartments. Taken together, these results support cell plasticity as a driver of BPH progression and therapeutic resistance to androgen signaling inhibition, and identify antioxidant therapy as a promising treatment of BPH.


Assuntos
Sintomas do Trato Urinário Inferior , Hiperplasia Prostática , Masculino , Humanos , Camundongos , Animais , Idoso , Androgênios/farmacologia , Androgênios/metabolismo , Próstata/patologia , Hiperplasia Prostática/metabolismo , Antioxidantes/farmacologia , Plasticidade Celular , Hiperplasia/patologia , Chumbo/metabolismo , Chumbo/uso terapêutico , Camundongos Transgênicos , Prolactina/metabolismo , Prolactina/uso terapêutico , Células Epiteliais/metabolismo , Sintomas do Trato Urinário Inferior/metabolismo , Sintomas do Trato Urinário Inferior/patologia
2.
Med Sci (Paris) ; 39(5): 429-436, 2023 May.
Artigo em Francês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37219347

RESUMO

Inhibition of androgen signaling is the gold standard treatment of benign prostate hyperplasia and prostate cancer. Despite the initial response to these treatments, therapeutic resistance is ultimately observed in most patients. Single cell RNAseq studies have shown that castration-tolerant luminal cells share several molecular and functional features with cells identified as luminal progenitor in physiological conditions. The increased prevalence of luminal progenitor-like cells in tumor contexts might result from their intrinsic androgen-independence and from the reprogramming of differentiated luminal cells into a castration-tolerant state. Thus, it is currently hypothesized that the luminal progenitor molecular profile might constitute a functional hub for cell survival in androgen deprivation context, a prerequisite for tumor regrowth. Therapeutic intervention interfering with luminal lineage plasticity is a promising approach to prevent prostate cancer progression.


Title: Progéniteurs luminaux prostatiques - De la régénération tissulaire à la résistance thérapeutique. Abstract: Les traitements médicaux de l'hyperplasie bénigne et du cancer de la prostate reposent essentiellement sur l'inhibition de la signalisation androgénique. Bien qu'initialement efficaces, ces traitements sont tôt ou tard confrontés à une résistance thérapeutique. Des données récentes de séquençage d'ARN sur cellules uniques montrent que les cellules luminales survivant à la déprivation androgénique dans ces contextes pathologiques présentent un profil moléculaire semblable à celui de cellules luminales progénitrices, présentes en faible quantité dans un contexte physiologique. Ce profil moléculaire pourrait constituer un hub de résistance à la castration et résulter, en partie, de la reprogrammation des cellules luminales tumorales. L'inhibition thérapeutique de cette plasticité cellulaire constitue une piste prometteuse pour limiter la progression du cancer prostatique.


Assuntos
Próstata , Neoplasias da Próstata , Masculino , Humanos , Próstata/patologia , Neoplasias da Próstata/patologia , Androgênios , Antagonistas de Androgênios , Células-Tronco Neoplásicas/patologia
3.
Cancers (Basel) ; 14(15)2022 Aug 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35954439

RESUMO

Background: The molecular and cellular mechanisms that drive castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) remain poorly understood. LSCmed cells defines an FACS-enriched population of castration-tolerant luminal progenitor cells that has been proposed to promote tumorigenesis and CRPC in Pten-deficient mice. The goals of this study were to assess the relevance of LSCmed cells through the analysis of their molecular proximity with luminal progenitor-like cell clusters identified by single-cell (sc)RNA-seq analyses of mouse and human prostates, and to investigate their regulation by in silico-predicted growth factors present in the prostatic microenvironment. Methods: Several bioinformatic pipelines were used for pan-transcriptomic analyses. LSCmed cells isolated by cell sorting from healthy and malignant mouse prostates were characterized using RT-qPCR, immunofluorescence and organoid assays. Results: LSCmed cells match (i) mouse luminal progenitor cell clusters identified in scRNA-seq analyses for which we provide a common 15-gene signature including the previously identified LSCmed marker Krt4, and (ii) Club/Hillock cells of the human prostate. This transcriptional overlap was maintained in cancer contexts. EGFR/ERBB4, IGF-1R and MET pathways were identified as autocrine/paracrine regulators of progenitor, proliferation and differentiation properties of LSCmed cells. The functional redundancy of these signaling pathways allows them to bypass the effect of receptor-targeted pharmacological inhibitors. Conclusions: Based on transcriptomic profile and pharmacological resistance to monotherapies that failed in CRPC patients, this study supports LSCmed cells as a relevant model to investigate the role of castration-tolerant progenitor cells in human prostate cancer progression.

4.
Cancers (Basel) ; 14(7)2022 Mar 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35406395

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: New predictive biomarkers are needed to accurately predict metastasis-free survival (MFS) and cancer-specific survival (CSS) in localized prostate cancer (PC). Keratin-7 (KRT7) overexpression has been associated with poor prognosis in several cancers and is described as a novel prostate progenitor marker in the mouse prostate. METHODS: KRT7 expression was evaluated in prostatic cell lines and in human tissue by immunohistochemistry (IHC, on advanced PC, n = 91) and immunofluorescence (IF, on localized PC, n = 285). The KRT7 mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) was quantified in different compartments by digital analysis and correlated to clinical endpoints in the localized PC cohort. RESULTS: KRT7 is expressed in prostatic cell lines and found in the basal and supra-basal compartment from healthy prostatic glands and benign peri-tumoral glands from localized PC. The KRT7 staining is lost in luminal cells from localized tumors and found as an aberrant sporadic staining (2.2%) in advanced PC. In the localized PC cohort, high KRT7 MFI above the 80th percentile in the basal compartment was significantly and independently correlated with MFS and CSS, and with hypertrophic basal cell phenotype. CONCLUSION: High KRT7 expression in benign glands is an independent biomarker of MFS and CSS, and its expression is lost in tumoral cells. These results require further validation on larger cohorts.

5.
Nat Rev Urol ; 19(4): 201-218, 2022 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35079142

RESUMO

Stem and progenitor cells of the adult prostate epithelium have historically been believed to reside mainly or exclusively within the basal cell compartment and to possess basal-like phenotypic characteristics. Within the past decade, evidence of the existence of luminal epithelial cells exhibiting stem/progenitor properties has been obtained by lineage tracing and by functional characterization of sorted luminal-like cells. In 2020, the boom of single-cell transcriptomics led to increasingly exhaustive profiling of putative mouse luminal progenitor cells and, importantly, to the identification of cognate cells in the human prostate. The enrichment of luminal progenitor cells in genetically modified mouse models of prostate inflammation, benign prostate hypertrophy and prostate cancer, and the intrinsic castration tolerance of these cells, suggest their potential role in prostate pathogenesis and in resistance to androgen deprivation therapy. This Review bridges different approaches that have been used in the field to characterize luminal progenitor cells, including the unification of multiple identifiers employed to define these cells (names and markers). It also provides an overview of the intrinsic functional properties of luminal progenitor cells, and addresses their relevance in mouse and human prostate pathophysiology.


Assuntos
Hiperplasia Prostática , Neoplasias da Próstata , Antagonistas de Androgênios , Animais , Células Epiteliais , Humanos , Masculino , Camundongos , Próstata/patologia , Hiperplasia Prostática/patologia , Neoplasias da Próstata/patologia , Células-Tronco
6.
Cell Calcium ; 82: 102051, 2019 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31276858

RESUMO

Calcium stones and calculi are observed in numerous human tissues. They are the result of deposition of calcium salts and are due to high local calcium concentrations. Prostatic calculi are usually classified as endogenous or extrinsic stones. Endogenous stones are commonly caused by obstruction of the prostatic ducts around an enlarged prostate resulting from benign prostatic hyperplasia or from chronic inflammation. The latter occurs mainly around the urethra and is generally caused by reflux of urine into the prostate. Calcium concentrations higher than in the plasma at sites of infection may induce the chemotactic response that eventually leads to recruitment of inflammatory cells. The calcium sensing receptor (CaSR) may be crucial for this recruitment as its expression and activity are increased by cytokines such as IL-6 and high extracellular calcium concentrations, respectively. The links between calcium calculi, inflammation, calcium supplementation, and CaSR functions in prostate cancer patients will be discussed in this review.


Assuntos
Calcinose/metabolismo , Cálcio/metabolismo , Cálculos/metabolismo , Inflamação/metabolismo , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Próstata/metabolismo , Hiperplasia Prostática/metabolismo , Animais , Calcinose/patologia , Cálculos/patologia , Humanos , Inflamação/patologia , Masculino , Neoplasias/patologia , Próstata/patologia , Hiperplasia Prostática/patologia , Receptores de Detecção de Cálcio/metabolismo , Transdução de Sinais
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