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Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations

BACKGROUND: Human fetal prostate buds appear in the 10th gestational week as solid cords, which branch and form lumens in response to androgen 1. Previous in vivo analysis of prostate epithelia isolated from benign prostatectomy specimens indicated that Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Hi) basal cells possess e...

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Autores principales: Liu, Haibo, Cadaneanu, Radu M, Lai, Kevin, Zhang, Baohui, Huo, Lihong, An, Dong Sun, Li, Xinmin, Lewis, Michael S, Garraway, Isla P
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4409819/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25663004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pros.22959
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author Liu, Haibo
Cadaneanu, Radu M
Lai, Kevin
Zhang, Baohui
Huo, Lihong
An, Dong Sun
Li, Xinmin
Lewis, Michael S
Garraway, Isla P
author_facet Liu, Haibo
Cadaneanu, Radu M
Lai, Kevin
Zhang, Baohui
Huo, Lihong
An, Dong Sun
Li, Xinmin
Lewis, Michael S
Garraway, Isla P
author_sort Liu, Haibo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Human fetal prostate buds appear in the 10th gestational week as solid cords, which branch and form lumens in response to androgen 1. Previous in vivo analysis of prostate epithelia isolated from benign prostatectomy specimens indicated that Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Hi) basal cells possess efficient tubule initiation capability relative to other subpopulations 2. Stromal interactions and branching morphogenesis displayed by adult tubule-initiating cells (TIC) are reminiscent of fetal prostate development. In the current study, we evaluated in vivo tubule initiation by human fetal prostate cells and determined expression profiles of fetal and adult epithelial subpopulations in an effort to identify pathways used by TIC. METHODS: Immunostaining and FACS analysis based on Epcam, CD44, and CD49f expression demonstrated the majority (99.9%) of fetal prostate epithelial cells (FC) were Epcam(+)CD44(−) with variable levels of CD49f expression. Fetal populations isolated via cell sorting were implanted into immunocompromised mice. Total RNA isolation from Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Hi) FC, adult Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Hi) TIC, Epcam(+)CD44(+)CD49f(Hi) basal cells (BC), and Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Lo) luminal cells (LC) was performed, followed by microarray analysis of 19 samples using the Affymetrix Gene Chip Human U133 Plus 2.0 Array. Data was analyzed using Partek Genomics Suite Version 6.4. Genes selected showed >2-fold difference in expression and P < 5.00E-2. Results were validated with RT-PCR. RESULTS: Grafts retrieved from Epcam(+)CD44(−) fetal cell implants displayed tubule formation with differentiation into basal and luminal compartments, while only stromal outgrowths were recovered from Epcam- fetal cell implants. Hierarchical clustering revealed four distinct groups determined by antigenic profile (TIC, BC, LC) and developmental stage (FC). TIC and BC displayed basal gene expression profiles, while LC expressed secretory genes. FC had a unique profile with the most similarities to adult TIC. Functional, network, and canonical pathway identification using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis Version 7.6 compiled genes with the highest differential expression (TIC relative to BC or LC). Many of these genes were found to be significantly associated with prostate tumorigenesis. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate clustering gene expression profiles of FC and adult TIC. Pathways associated with TIC are known to be deregulated in cancer, suggesting a cell-of-origin role for TIC versus re-emergence of pathways common to these cells in tumorigenesis. Prostate 75: 764–776, 2015. © The Authors. The Prostate, published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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spelling pubmed-44098192015-04-29 Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations Liu, Haibo Cadaneanu, Radu M Lai, Kevin Zhang, Baohui Huo, Lihong An, Dong Sun Li, Xinmin Lewis, Michael S Garraway, Isla P Prostate Original Articles BACKGROUND: Human fetal prostate buds appear in the 10th gestational week as solid cords, which branch and form lumens in response to androgen 1. Previous in vivo analysis of prostate epithelia isolated from benign prostatectomy specimens indicated that Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Hi) basal cells possess efficient tubule initiation capability relative to other subpopulations 2. Stromal interactions and branching morphogenesis displayed by adult tubule-initiating cells (TIC) are reminiscent of fetal prostate development. In the current study, we evaluated in vivo tubule initiation by human fetal prostate cells and determined expression profiles of fetal and adult epithelial subpopulations in an effort to identify pathways used by TIC. METHODS: Immunostaining and FACS analysis based on Epcam, CD44, and CD49f expression demonstrated the majority (99.9%) of fetal prostate epithelial cells (FC) were Epcam(+)CD44(−) with variable levels of CD49f expression. Fetal populations isolated via cell sorting were implanted into immunocompromised mice. Total RNA isolation from Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Hi) FC, adult Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Hi) TIC, Epcam(+)CD44(+)CD49f(Hi) basal cells (BC), and Epcam(+)CD44(−)CD49f(Lo) luminal cells (LC) was performed, followed by microarray analysis of 19 samples using the Affymetrix Gene Chip Human U133 Plus 2.0 Array. Data was analyzed using Partek Genomics Suite Version 6.4. Genes selected showed >2-fold difference in expression and P < 5.00E-2. Results were validated with RT-PCR. RESULTS: Grafts retrieved from Epcam(+)CD44(−) fetal cell implants displayed tubule formation with differentiation into basal and luminal compartments, while only stromal outgrowths were recovered from Epcam- fetal cell implants. Hierarchical clustering revealed four distinct groups determined by antigenic profile (TIC, BC, LC) and developmental stage (FC). TIC and BC displayed basal gene expression profiles, while LC expressed secretory genes. FC had a unique profile with the most similarities to adult TIC. Functional, network, and canonical pathway identification using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis Version 7.6 compiled genes with the highest differential expression (TIC relative to BC or LC). Many of these genes were found to be significantly associated with prostate tumorigenesis. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate clustering gene expression profiles of FC and adult TIC. Pathways associated with TIC are known to be deregulated in cancer, suggesting a cell-of-origin role for TIC versus re-emergence of pathways common to these cells in tumorigenesis. Prostate 75: 764–776, 2015. © The Authors. The Prostate, published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2015-05-15 2015-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4409819/ /pubmed/25663004 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pros.22959 Text en © 2015 The Authors. The Prostate, published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Liu, Haibo
Cadaneanu, Radu M
Lai, Kevin
Zhang, Baohui
Huo, Lihong
An, Dong Sun
Li, Xinmin
Lewis, Michael S
Garraway, Isla P
Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations
title Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations
title_full Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations
title_fullStr Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations
title_full_unstemmed Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations
title_short Differential Gene Expression Profiling of Functionally and Developmentally Distinct Human Prostate Epithelial Populations
title_sort differential gene expression profiling of functionally and developmentally distinct human prostate epithelial populations
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4409819/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25663004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pros.22959
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