A single-cell atlas of the mouse and human prostate reveals heterogeneity and conservation of epithelial progenitors

Understanding the cellular constituents of the prostate is essential for identifying the cell of origin for benign prostatic hyperplasia and prostate adenocarcinoma. Here we describe a comprehensive single-cell atlas of the adult mouse prostate epithelium, which demonstrates extensive heterogeneity. We observe distinct lobe-specific luminal epithelial populations (LumA, LumD, LumL, and LumV) in the distal region of the four prostate lobes, a proximally-enriched luminal population (LumP) that is not lobe-specific, as well as a periurethral population (PrU) that shares both basal and luminal features. Functional analyses suggest that LumP and PrU cells have multipotent progenitor activity in organoid formation and tissue reconstitution assays. Furthermore, we show that mouse distal and proximal luminal cells are most similar to human acinar and ductal populations, that a PrU-like population is conserved between species, and that the mouse lateral prostate is most similar to the human peripheral zone. Our findings elucidate new prostate epithelial progenitors, and help resolve long-standing questions about the anatomical relationships between the mouse and human prostate.

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