Human epithelia are organized in a hierarchical structure, where stem cells generate terminally differentiated cells via intermediate progenitors. This two-step differentiation process is conserved in all tissues, but it is not known whether a common gene set contributes to its regulation. Here, we show that retinoic acid (RA) regulates early human prostate epithelial differentiation by activating a tightly coexpressed set of 80 genes (e.g., TMPRSS2). Response kinetics suggested that some of these genes could be direct RA targets, whereas others are probably responding indirectly to RA stimulation. Comparative bioinformatic analyses of published tissue-specific microarrays and a large-scale transcriptomic data set revealed that these 80 gen...
Stem cells are thought to be the cell of origin in malignant transformation in many tissues, but the...
Perturbation of androgen signalling drives progression of human prostate cancer (CaP) to castration-...
Androgen signals through androgen receptor (AR) to influence prostate development and cancer. How st...
SummaryHuman epithelia are organized in a hierarchical structure, where stem cells generate terminal...
Human epithelia are organized in a hierarchical structure, where stem cells generate terminally diff...
BACKGROUND: Signals between stem cells and stroma are important in establishing the stem cell niche....
Background Signals between stem cells and stroma are important in establishing the stem cell niche. ...
In the human prostate, expression of prostate-specific genes is known to be directly regulated by th...
While progression from normal prostatic epithelium to invasive cancer is driven by molecular alterat...
BACKGROUND: Stromal signalling increases the lateral cell adhesions of prostate epithelial cells gro...
BackgroundHuman fetal prostate buds appear in the 10th gestational week as solid cords, which branch...
Background The global gene expression profiles of adult and fetal murine prostate stem cells were de...
A hallmark of cancer cells is the ability to evade the growth inhibitory/pro-apoptotic action of phy...
The prostate is the most common site of disease in the human male. An understanding of its normal gr...
Prostate cancer (PC) develops from an androgen-dependent tissue that contains androgen receptors in ...
Stem cells are thought to be the cell of origin in malignant transformation in many tissues, but the...
Perturbation of androgen signalling drives progression of human prostate cancer (CaP) to castration-...
Androgen signals through androgen receptor (AR) to influence prostate development and cancer. How st...
SummaryHuman epithelia are organized in a hierarchical structure, where stem cells generate terminal...
Human epithelia are organized in a hierarchical structure, where stem cells generate terminally diff...
BACKGROUND: Signals between stem cells and stroma are important in establishing the stem cell niche....
Background Signals between stem cells and stroma are important in establishing the stem cell niche. ...
In the human prostate, expression of prostate-specific genes is known to be directly regulated by th...
While progression from normal prostatic epithelium to invasive cancer is driven by molecular alterat...
BACKGROUND: Stromal signalling increases the lateral cell adhesions of prostate epithelial cells gro...
BackgroundHuman fetal prostate buds appear in the 10th gestational week as solid cords, which branch...
Background The global gene expression profiles of adult and fetal murine prostate stem cells were de...
A hallmark of cancer cells is the ability to evade the growth inhibitory/pro-apoptotic action of phy...
The prostate is the most common site of disease in the human male. An understanding of its normal gr...
Prostate cancer (PC) develops from an androgen-dependent tissue that contains androgen receptors in ...
Stem cells are thought to be the cell of origin in malignant transformation in many tissues, but the...
Perturbation of androgen signalling drives progression of human prostate cancer (CaP) to castration-...
Androgen signals through androgen receptor (AR) to influence prostate development and cancer. How st...