4.7 Article

Development, maturation, and maintenance of human prostate inferred from somatic mutations

Journal

CELL STEM CELL
Volume 28, Issue 7, Pages 1262-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2021.02.005

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust
  2. PCF Challenge Research Award [18CHAL11]

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Research on clonal dynamics and mutation burden in healthy human prostate epithelium reveals the relevance to prostate cancer, with clonal expansions showing different characteristics during fetal development, puberty, and aging.
Clonal dynamics and mutation burden in healthy human prostate epithelium are relevant to prostate cancer. We sequenced whole genomes from 409 microdissections of normal prostate epithelium across 8 donors, using phylogenetic reconstruction with spatial mapping in a 59-year-old man's prostate to reconstruct tissue dynamics across the lifespan. Somatic mutations accumulate steadily at similar to 16 mutations/year/clone, with higher rates in peripheral than peri-urethral regions. The 24-30 independent glandular subunits are established as rudimentary ductal structures during fetal development by 5-10 embryonic cells each. Puberty induces formation of further side and terminal branches by local stem cells disseminated throughout the rudimentary ducts during development. During adult tissue maintenance, clonal expansions have limited geographic scope and minimal migration. Driver mutations are rare in aging prostate epithelium, but the one driver we did observe generated a sizable intraepithelial clonal expansion. Leveraging unbiased clock-like mutations, we define prostate stem cell dynamics through fetal development, puberty, and aging.

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