[HTML][HTML] Genomic analysis of benign prostatic hyperplasia implicates cellular relandscaping in disease pathogenesis

LW Middleton, Z Shen, S Varma, AS Pollack, X Gong… - JCI insight, 2019 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
LW Middleton, Z Shen, S Varma, AS Pollack, X Gong, S Zhu, C Zhu, JW Foley, S Vennam
JCI insight, 2019ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is the most common cause of lower urinary tract
symptoms in men. Current treatments target prostate physiology rather than BPH
pathophysiology and are only partially effective. Here, we applied next-generation
sequencing to gain insight into BPH. By RNA-Seq, we uncovered transcriptional
heterogeneity among BPH cases, where a 65-gene BPH stromal signature correlated with
symptom severity. Stromal signaling molecules bone morphogenetic protein 5 (BMP5) and …
Abstract
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is the most common cause of lower urinary tract symptoms in men. Current treatments target prostate physiology rather than BPH pathophysiology and are only partially effective. Here, we applied next-generation sequencing to gain insight into BPH. By RNA-Seq, we uncovered transcriptional heterogeneity among BPH cases, where a 65-gene BPH stromal signature correlated with symptom severity. Stromal signaling molecules bone morphogenetic protein 5 (BMP5) and CXC chemokine ligand 13 (CXCL13) were enriched in BPH while estrogen-regulated pathways were depleted. Notably, BMP5’s addition to cultured prostatic myofibroblasts altered their expression profile toward a BPH profile that included the BPH stromal signature. RNA-Seq also suggested an altered cellular milieu in BPH, which we verified by immunohistochemistry and single-cell RNA-Seq. In particular, BPH tissues exhibited enrichment of myofibroblast subsets but also depletion of neuroendocrine cells and an estrogen receptor–positive fibroblast cell type residing near the epithelium. By whole-exome sequencing, we uncovered somatic single-nucleotide variants in BPH, of uncertain pathogenic significance but indicative of clonal cell expansions. Thus, genomic characterization of BPH has identified a clinically relevant stromal signature and new candidate disease pathways (including a likely role for BMP5 signaling) and reveals BPH to be not merely a hyperplasia, but rather a fundamental relandscaping of cell types.
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