Cellular cartography reveals mouse prostate organization and determinants of castration resistance

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2024 Dec 27:2024.12.27.630532. doi: 10.1101/2024.12.27.630532.

Abstract

Inadequate response to androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) frequently arises in prostate cancer, driven by cellular mechanisms that remain poorly understood. Here, we integrated single-cell RNA sequencing, single-cell multiomics, and spatial transcriptomics to define the transcriptional, epigenetic, and spatial basis of cell identity and castration response in the mouse prostate. Leveraging these data along with a meta-analysis of human prostates and prostate cancer, we identified cellular orthologs and key determinants of ADT response and resistance. Our findings reveal that mouse prostates harbor lobe-specific luminal epithelial cell types distinguished by unique gene regulatory modules and anatomically defined androgen-responsive transcriptional programs, indicative of divergent developmental origins. Androgen-insensitive, stem-like epithelial populations - resembling human club and hillock cells - are notably enriched in the urethra and ventral prostate but are rare in other lobes. Within the ventral prostate, we also uncovered two additional androgen-responsive luminal epithelial cell types, marked by Pbsn or Spink1 expression, which align with human luminal subsets and may define the origin of distinct prostate cancer subtypes. Castration profoundly reshaped luminal epithelial transcriptomes, with castration-resistant luminal epithelial cells activating stress-responsive and stemness programs. These transcriptional signatures are enriched in tumor cells from ADT-treated and castration-resistant prostate cancer patients, underscoring their likely role in driving treatment resistance. Collectively, our comprehensive cellular atlas of the mouse prostate illuminates the importance of lobe-specific contexts for prostate cancer modeling and reveals potential therapeutic targets to counter castration resistance.

Significance statement: Androgen deprivation therapy is a mainstay in prostate cancer treatment, yet many patients eventually develop castration-resistant disease-a lethal progression driven by poorly understood cellular mechanisms. Our study provides a comprehensive cellular map of the prostate, identifying key determinants of normal organization and castration-induced remodeling. By pinpointing the cell types and molecular programs that confer ADT responsiveness or resistance, our findings offer new directions for prostate cancer modeling and pave the way toward novel therapeutic strategies aimed at enhancing ADT efficacy and preventing the emergence of castration-resistant prostate cancer.

Publication types

  • Preprint