Prostate cancer originating in basal cells progresses to adenocarcinoma propagated by luminal-like cells

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Abstract

The relationship between the cells that initiate cancer and the cancer stem-like cells that propagate tumors has been poorly defined. In a human prostate tissue transformation model, basal cells expressing the oncogenes Myc and myristoylated AKT can initiate heterogeneous tumors. Tumors contain features of acinartype adenocarcinoma with elevated eIF4E-driven protein translation and squamous cell carcinoma marked by activated betacatenin. Lentiviral integration site analysis revealed that alternative histological phenotypes can be clonally derived from a common cell of origin. In advanced disease, adenocarcinoma can be propagated by self-renewing tumor cells with an androgen receptor-low immature luminal phenotype in the absence of basal-like cells. These data indicate that advanced prostate adenocarcinoma initiated in basal cells can be maintained by luminal-like tumor-propagating cells. Determining the cells that maintain human prostate adenocarcinoma and the signaling pathways characterizing these tumor-propagating cells is critical for developing effective therapeutic strategies against this population.

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Stoyanova, T., Cooper, A. R., Drake, J. M., Liu, X., Armstrong, A. J., Pienta, K. J., … Goldstein, A. S. (2013). Prostate cancer originating in basal cells progresses to adenocarcinoma propagated by luminal-like cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(50), 20111–20116. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1320565110

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