Abstract
Prostate cancer is the second most common malignancy in men worldwide and consists of a mixture of tumor and non-tumor cell types. To characterize the prostate cancer tumor microenvironment, we perform single-cell RNA-sequencing on prostate biopsies, prostatectomy specimens, and patient-derived organoids from localized prostate cancer patients. We uncover heterogeneous cellular states in prostate epithelial cells marked by high androgen signaling states that are enriched in prostate cancer and identify a population of tumor-associated club cells that may be associated with prostate carcinogenesis. ERG-negative tumor cells, compared to ERG-positive cells, demonstrate shared heterogeneity with surrounding luminal epithelial cells and appear to give rise to common tumor microenvironment responses. Finally, we show that prostate epithelial organoids harbor tumor-associated epithelial cell states and are enriched with distinct cell types and states from their parent tissues. Our results provide diagnostically relevant insights and advance our understanding of the cellular states associated with prostate carcinogenesis.
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Introduction
The prostate consists of multiple cell types, including epithelial, stromal, and immune cells, each of which has a specialized gene expression profile. The development of cancer from prostate tissue involves complex interactions of tumor cells with surrounding epithelial and stromal cells and can occur multifocally, suggesting that prostate epithelial cells may undergo cellular state transitions towards carcinogenesis1,2,3,4,5,6. Previous studies on prostate cancer (PCa) molecular changes have focused on unsorted bulk tissue samples, leaving a gap in our understanding of the adjacent epithelial cell states.
The classification of prostate epithelial cells has been expanded over the past few years from three types (basal epithelial cells, luminal epithelial cells, and neuroendocrine cells)7,8 to include hillock cells and club cells9. The roles of these additional cell types in the prostate are largely unknown. Most PCa are marked by the expansion of malignant cells with luminal epithelial features and the absence of basal epithelial cells. However, to date, the role of additional cell populations beyond the luminal and basal types is not well known.
Another underexplored area is the tumor microenvironmental changes that occur based on dominant genomic drivers in PCa. PCa tumor cells are driven by a number of oncogenic alterations including highly prevalent gene fusion events such as TMPRSS2-ERG and others involving ETS family transcription factors such as ETV1/4/51,10,11,12. Tumor cells without ETS-fusion events and non-malignant luminal cells, however, have not been thoroughly characterized on a single-cell level, and uncertainty remains whether ETS-fusion events could evoke differential stromal and immune cell responses.
Here, we analyze at single-cell resolution the tumor microenvironment and cellular states associated with prostate carcinogenesis in localized prostate cancer samples. We characterize tumor cells and the surrounding epithelial, stromal, and immune cell microenvironment and identify cell states that are associated with tumorigenesis via single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq). Furthermore, using in vitro organoids from PCa tumor tissues, we describe molecular and cellular features of prostate epithelial organoids compared to prostate tissues.
Results
To probe the diversity of cell types and transcriptional states of cells in localized prostate cancer specimens, we obtained prostate cancer tissue from transrectal prostate biopsies and radical prostatectomy (RP) specimens from men with localized prostate cancer (N = 11 patients, Supplementary Data 1). Single cells were isolated for scRNA-seq (Supplementary Data 1) using an improved Seq-well single-cell platform13. Altogether, 21,743 cells were analyzed and a total of 9 different major cell types were identified, marked by specific gene expression profiles (“Methods”, Fig. 1a, b).
Cell-type identification was determined by examining differentially expressed genes (DEGs) as well as signature scores from normal prostate and immune cell population gene sets9,14. Cells in the merged dataset were annotated as epithelial, stromal (endothelial, fibroblast, and smooth muscle) and immune cells (T-cells, myeloid cells, plasma cells, mast cells, and B cells) based on established marker genes. Epithelial cells (N = 13,322) were identified based upon the expression of luminal epithelial (LE) markers KLK3, ACPP, and MSMB, consistent with LE cells found as the dominant epithelial cell type in PCa samples. Immune cells were identified based on the high-level expression of PTPRC in five clusters, of which one cluster was marked by high-level expression of IL7R, CD8A, and CD69, indicating a mixture of both CD8 and CD4 T-cells; a second cluster was characterized by the myeloid cell markers APOE, LYZ, and IL1B15,16,17,18. The third PTPRC + cluster represented plasma cells marked by high-level expression of MZB1 and IGJ. The other two remaining PTPRC + clusters were annotated as mast cells expressing CPA3, KIT, and TPSAB1, and a population of B cells expressing MS4A1, CD22, and CD79A. Stromal cells consisted of endothelial cells characterized by CLDN5 and SELE expression, fibroblasts expressing C1S, DCN, and C7, and smooth muscle cells expressing ACTA2, MYH11, and RGS5 (Fig. 1c).
As our samples consisted of prostate biopsies (N = 3 patients) and RP specimens (N = 8 patients), half of which had matched benign-appearing tissue (Supplementary Data 1), we tested whether each sampling strategy captured a similar distribution of different cell types across samples. All major cell types were captured in each sample with epithelial cells comprising the largest population (Fig. 1d). No significant difference was found among the three sample types (P > 0.05, Mann–Whitney U test) (Fig. 1e). We also compared the cell-type composition of epithelial cells, stromal cells (endothelial, fibroblasts, and smooth muscle), and immune cells (T cells and myeloid cells) among paired tumor (N = 4), paired normal (N = 4), and RP unpaired tumor tissues (N = 4) (Supplementary Data 1) and found no significant differences. The main cell types identified were validated by SingleR annotation19 (Supplementary Data 1). Furthermore, within each biopsied patient, we tested whether biopsies from the two anatomical regions identified similar cell types and found that all cell types were recovered in each biopsy sample with some sampling differences by anatomical regions (Supplementary Data 1).
Epithelial cell clusters reveal tumor cells and surrounding non-tumor epithelial cell heterogeneity
To identify the transcriptional cell states of epithelial cells associated with prostate cancer, we performed a graph-based clustering analysis and identified 20 clusters (Fig. 2a). We then conducted single-sample gene-set enrichment analysis20,21 (ssGSEA) using signature gene sets developed from single-cell profiling of normal prostates (Supplementary Data 2) in a previous study to determine the major cell subtypes9. Clusters with KRT5, KRT15, KRT17, and TP63 expression (Fig. 2b) and significantly upregulated basal epithelial (BE) signature scores were identified as BE cells. Given that tumor cells predominantly express LE cell markers such as KLK2, KLK3, ACPP, and NKX3-1, clusters with high LE signatures scores could be either tumor cells or non-malignant LE cells (Fig. 2b). BE and LE signature feature plots also revealed a cluster of cells (cluster 5) that we termed other epithelial (OE) cells (Fig. 2a, c) with lower BE and LE signatures scores (Supplementary Fig. 1a) and were characterized by several markers previously identified as associated with PCa including PIGR, MMP7 and CP (Fig. 2b). In previous studies, PIGR has shown a role in promoting cell transformation and proliferation22, MMP7 may promote prostate carcinogenesis through induction of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition23, and serum CP levels have been used as a marker in PCa24.
Other than these three major types of epithelial cells, we next aimed to identify the putative tumor cells within our dataset. Approximately 50% of PCa tumors from European ancestry patients harbor TMPRSS2-ERG fusion events and less frequently harbor other ETS-fusion events (ETV1, ETV4, ETV5)25. Therefore, we tested cells for ERG, ETV1, ETV4, or ETV5 expression, and found that ERG expression was upregulated in four clusters which we annotated as ERG-positive (ERG+ ) tumor cells (Fig. 2b and Supplementary Fig. 1a) but no cluster showed expression of ETV1, ETV4, or ETV5, suggesting that the six patients that contributed to these four ERG+ tumor cells harbored ERG fusion events. The identity of ERG+ tumor cells was further supported by the upregulation of the SETLUR PROSTATE CANCER TMPRSS2-ERG FUSION UP gene-set signature score in these cells26 (Supplementary Fig. 1b). ERG status was histologically validated in a subset of patients using immunohistochemistry (Supplementary Fig. 2b). Furthermore, STAR-Fusion27 identified potential fusion transcripts of TMPRSS2-ERG fusions in two ERG+ patients.
To identify tumor cells without ETS-fusion events, we tested the LIU PROSTATE CANCER UP and other known PCa tumor marker gene-set signature scores and identified 11 clusters in total with upregulated signature scores of at least one prostate cancer gene set (Supplementary Fig. 1a, b). Single-sample gene-set enrichment analysis (ssGSEA) on these 11 clusters also showed at least one prostate cancer gene set that scored in the top 1% of all C2CGP gene-set collection (N = 3297) (Supplementary Data 3). These 11 clusters included the four ERG+ tumor cell clusters we previously annotated and seven other clusters with no ERG expression which we annotated as ERG-negative (ERG-) tumor cells (Fig. 2c). The ERG− tumor cell clusters were characterized by the enrichment of at least one known PCa gene-set signature and higher expression of tumor markers such as SPON228 and PCA3 compared to non-tumor LE cells in our dataset (Fig. 2b). No tumor clusters detected within our dataset showed enrichment of a BE signature.
To validate our tumor cell assignments, we estimated copy number variations (CNV) with InferCNV29, using non-malignant LE cells as a reference. From the CNV estimation visualization (Supplementary Fig. 1c), we identified significantly different CNV patterns in both ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells. Non-uniform CNV profiles were detected within ERG+ and ERG− tumor cell populations, suggesting heterogeneity in both tumor cell populations. We also performed whole-exome sequencing (WES) for three RP samples to confirm tumor content. In the WES samples, we detected somatic mutations in known PCa genes, including KMT2D, MTOR, SPOP, and PIK3R1 (Supplementary Data 4), indicating tumor content in tissues assessed by single-cell analysis. Copy number analysis of the WES samples revealed similar CNV events with the inferCNV estimation, such as chr4q31 amplification, chr11q24 amplification, and chr19q13 deletion (Supplementary Data 4), supporting our tumor cell identification.
While we did not observe a separate neuroendocrine cell cluster, we tested for prostate neuroendocrine (NE) cells9,30 using an established NE cell signature gene set9 and computed the NE signature scores for each epithelial cell. Taking the cells ranking in the top 0.5% NE signature score, we detected 66 putative NE cells within the BE cell population, characterized by CHGB, KRT4, and LY6D expression9 (Supplementary Fig. 1c, d).
To examine if our annotation method could accurately identify each epithelial cell type, we computed the top ten biomarkers for each cell type (Fig. 2d). BE cells showed high expression of established basal epithelial cell markers KRT5, KRT15, and KRT17. The top biomarkers in the OE clusters were PSCA, PIGR, MMP7, SCGB1A1, and LTF, of which PSCA is upregulated in PCa31,32,33 and SCGB1A1 is a marker for lung club cells34. ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells and non-malignant LE cells all showed high expression of luminal markers KLK3, KLK2, and ACPP35. ERG+ tumor cells were characterized by expression of ERG and tumor markers PCA3, AMACR, and TRPM8;35,36,37 ERG− tumor cells were marked by the expression of tumor markers PCA3 and TRPM835,36,37 (Fig. 2d).
Since most PCa is androgen-responsive with tumor cell proliferation dependent on the activity of the androgen receptor (AR)36,37,38,39, we tested for androgen responsiveness among the epithelial cell populations and identified LE cells and tumor cells as the most androgen-responsive as they scored significantly higher than other epithelial cell types in AR signature scores (Supplementary Fig. 1a). To identify putative prostate cancer stem cells that may contribute to prostate cancer development, we used an adult stem cell signature gene set38 and found that 56.4% of the BE cell population was enriched for the stem cell signature (Supplementary Fig. 1b).
A previous single-cell study of normal human prostate reported two populations of other epithelial cells: hillock cells characterized by KRT13, SERPINB1, CLDN4, and APOBEC2 expression and club cells characterized by the expression of SCGB3A1, PIGR, MMP7, CP, and LCN29. While we did not detect a separate hillock cell population within our prostate cancer epithelial cells (Supplementary Fig. 1e), we did detect a distinct population representing 6.5% of all epithelial cells (872 of 13,322) characterized by expression of PIGR, MMP7, CP, and LTF (Fig. 2d) (FDR q < 10e-20). We hypothesized that this epithelial cluster represented club cells that had previously been described in lung34 and normal prostate specimens9. To test this hypothesis, we applied a normal prostate club cell gene set signature9 and projected it onto our epithelial Uniform Manifold Approximation and Projection (UMAP). We found that cells with high club cell signature scores largely overlapped with this OE cluster (cluster 5) (Fig. 2e). Furthermore, this cluster was enriched for a lung club signature compared to other clusters (p < 2.2e-16, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) (Fig. 2f). Based on these results, we annotated this cluster as club cells. We then conducted a ssGSEA analysis on all epithelial cells using the BE, LE, and club cell signatures generated from the DEG profiles (Supplementary Data 2). All three cell-type signature scores were strongly correlated to the corresponding cell types, supporting our annotation (Supplementary Fig. 1f).
Club and BE cells harbor PCa-enriched LE-like cell states that are upregulated in AR signaling
A recent study identified a luminal progenitor cell type in mouse and human prostates characterized by high expression of LE markers KRT8, KRT18, and other markers including PSCA, KRT4, TACSTD2, and PIGR39. In epithelial cells from both paired normal and tumor samples in our study, we could not identify a distinctive cell cluster by the co-expression of KRT8, KRT18, and TACSTD2; however, the club cell population we identified was characterized by higher PSCA and PIGR expression compared to other epithelial cell types (Supplementary Fig. 3a).
Club cells in PCa have not been previously characterized. Since we exclusively captured club cells but not hillock cells in our PCa samples, we hypothesized that club cells may be associated with carcinogenesis and PCa-club cells might be enriched in certain cell states. To test this hypothesis, we integrated our prostate cancer club cells (Club PCa) with normal club cells from a previous study from healthy controls9 (Club Normal) and detected six cell states with distinct transcriptomic profiles (Fig. 3a) by selecting an optimal resolution to yield stable clusters (Supplementary Fig. 3b). Overall, compared to club cells from normal samples, PCa-club cells exhibited downregulation of genes including lipocalin 2 (LCN2) and a growth-inhibitory cytokine SCGB3A140,41 and upregulation of LTF, AR, and AR downstream members including KLK3, KLK2, ACPP, and NKX3-1 (Fig. 3b), which we hypothesized could be driven by the enrichment of one or more specific club cell states in the PCa samples.
For each of the six subclusters, a group of distinctive DEGs was identified (Fig. 3c) and each subcluster was detected in both Club PCa and Club Normal (Supplementary Fig. 3c), of which, cluster 0 represented over 45% of Club PCa and was enriched in Club PCa by more than three folds (P < 0.001, two-sided Fisher’s exact test (FET)) (Fig. 3d). This cluster was distinguished by a higher level of expression of LTF, luminal markers, and downstream AR pathway genes KLK2, KLK3, ACPP, PLA2G2A, and NKX3-1 (Fig. 3e), suggesting a luminal-like and androgen-responsive state39.
To test the functional role of this cell state in silico, we performed GSEA analysis using C2 canonical pathways (N = 2232) (Supplementary Data 5) and Hallmark (N = 50) gene set collections on cluster 0 vs other cell states. Among the top significantly upregulated gene sets in cluster 0 was the Hallmark Androgen Response pathway (FDR q < 10e-5) (Fig. 3f). These results were consistent with the upregulation of downstream AR pathway genes in cluster 0.
Next, we tested whether this PCa-enriched cell state represented a luminal-like cell state. We observed higher LE signature scores in cluster 0 compared to other cell states (P < 0.001, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) (Fig. 3g). Specifically, we compared the expression levels of both LE and club cell markers among cluster 0, other club cells, and the LE population within the PCa samples, and found that club cell cluster 0 exhibited higher expression of LE markers KLK2, KLK3, ACPP, and NKX3-1 than other cell states (Fig. 3h) while AR itself was not upregulated in cluster 0 (Supplementary Fig. 3d), and that expression of club markers PIGR, MMP7, CP, and LTF in all club cells was significantly higher than in the LE population (Fig. 3h). Overall, the population of PCa-club cells, compared to normal prostate clubs, was characterized by higher androgen signaling and enrichment of an LTFhigh and NKX3-1high luminal-like cell state (Fig. 3i).
The finding of a luminal-like club cell state led us to investigate if a similar cell state existed in the BE cell population of prostate cancer samples. Therefore, we integrated BE cells in the PCa samples (BE PCa) with BE cells from normal samples (BE Normal) and identified 9 cell states (Fig. 4a and Supplementary Fig. 4a) with distinctive DEGs (Supplementary Fig. 4b). While all 9 cell states were represented in both BE PCa and BE Normal cells (Fig. 4b), cluster 6 was found to be significantly enriched in PCa samples (31.8% vs 0.2%, PCa vs Normal, P < 2.2e-16, two-sided FET) while cluster 4 was enriched in normal samples (0.8% vs 15.9%, PCa vs Normal) (Fig. 4b and Supplementary Fig. 4c). Cluster 6 was predominantly found in PCa samples (94.2% in BE PCa) and was marked by higher expression downstream AR pathway members KLK3, KLK2, and ACPP (Supplementary Fig. 4b). Compared to other BE cells in PCa samples, BE cluster 6 also showed significant upregulation of AR (P = 0.004, Wilcoxon rank-sum test, Supplementary Fig. 4d). Among the top significantly upregulated gene sets were the Hallmark Androgen Response pathway within the Hallmark gene set collection (Supplementary Data 5) as well as androgen response pathways, estrogen pathways, insulin signaling pathway, and Kegg pathways in cancer within the C2CP gene set collection (FDR q < 0.1, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) (Fig. 4d)42,43,44. As AR pathway members were among the top biomarkers for cluster 6 (Fig. 4e), we hypothesized that BE cluster 6 may represent an intermediate BE/LE cell state, even though it did not cluster separately from other BE cells on the epithelial cell UMAP (Fig. 4f). Therefore, we compared the expression levels of BE and LE markers between BE cluster 6 and other BE cells, and found that the expression of basal markers such as KRT5, KRT15, and TP63 did not show any significant differences. The only significant difference in BE cluster 6 was the higher expression of luminal markers (Fig. 4g), though at lower levels compared to the PCa LE cell population. Moreover, we found that BE cluster 6 was significantly upregulated in the Hallmark Androgen Response signature and LE signature score (P < 0.001, Wilcoxon rank-sum test, Fig. 4h), supporting that this cell state may be a luminal-like state associated with prostate cancer.
Similarly, we identified eight cell states within the integrated LE dataset (Supplementary Fig. 4e). Unlike BE and club cells, we observed a clear separation between LE PCa and LE Normal (Supplementary Fig. 4e). Four cell states were found to be significantly enriched in LE PCa and two in LE Normal (P < 0.001, two-sided FET) (Supplementary Fig. 4f). Cluster 5 was marked by co-expression of club cell markers such as PIGR, MMP7, and CP, suggesting an intermediate population of LE and club cells. Cluster 1 was characterized by the overexpression of the AR-regulated gene TMEFF2 and insulin-like growth factor IGFBP5 compared to other cell states, and cluster 2 was upregulated in AR expression (Supplementary Fig. 4g).
We then tested if the PCa-enriched cell states in BE and club cells (Club cell cluster 0 and BE cluster 6) could be distinguished from other cell states in the differentiation trajectory. Using BE cells as the starting point consistent with a previous prostate scRNA-seq study9, we plotted the diffusion pseudotime trajectory and observed that tumor cells and LE cells (KLK3+ ) were later than club cells (PIGR+ , LTF+ , and PSCA+ ) and KRT5+ BE cells (Supplementary Fig. 5a, b), and that there was no significant difference in the computed pseudotime between BE and club cells (Supplementary Fig. 5c). We repeated the pseudotime analysis in an unsupervised manner without specifying the starting point and the pseudotime trajectory was consistent that BE cells give rise to club cells, LE, and both ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells in our dataset. Then, we projected the epithelial cells on the partition-based graph abstraction (PAGA) embedding with a list of cell-type-specific markers (Supplementary Fig. 5d), showing distinctive transcriptomic profiles in each cell population.
To further investigate our finding of PCa-related club cells and the club cell state with upregulated AR signaling, we re-analyzed two publicly available datasets of PCa scRNA-seq samples45,46. In the Karthaus dataset (N = 8 patients), we observed that the luminal-2 population (N = 10,603 of 44,756 cells) was significantly enriched for our club cell signature (Supplementary Fig. 5e). Sub-clustering analysis of the luminal-2 population supported the presence of PCa-enriched club cell states with an upregulated luminal cell signature (Supplementary Fig. 5f). Similarly, in the Chen dataset (N = 13 patients), we tested our club cell signature gene set in the population originally annotated as BE_Intermediate population (N = 1075 of 36,424 cells) and identified cells consistent with PCa-club cells from our dataset (Supplementary Fig. 5g). Sub-clustering revealed that both PCa-enriched BE and club cell states were present (Supplementary Fig. 5h) in the Chen et al. dataset. Compared to the other epithelial cells in these two datasets, the luminal-2 population in the Karthaus et al. dataset and BE_Intermediate population in the Chen et al. dataset showed significantly higher expression of PCa-club cell markers PIGR, MMP7, LTF, and CP (Supplementary Fig. 5i). After sub-clustering analysis within these two populations, we observed expression of PCa-club cell-enriched markers PIGR, LTF, and NKX3-1 in multiple subclusters (Supplementary Fig. 5f).
Integrated epithelial cell analysis reveals upregulated AR signaling in PCa samples
As PCa samples in this study included four paired tumor and normal samples, we tested if PCa-enriched cell states in BE, LE, and club cells were enriched in the surrounding epithelial cells of the PCa biopsies and in radical proctectomy tissue samples containing tumor cells. We compared the percentage composition of each BE and club cell state within all BE and club cells in all five sample types, respectively (Normal, biopsy, RP paired tumor, RP paired normal, and RP unpaired tumor). The PCa-enriched cell states of Club cell cluster 0 and BE cluster 6 were similarly represented in the four paired tumor and normal samples (P = 0.43, Mann–Whitney U test).
To characterize the overall epithelial cell transcriptional programs in PCa samples, we integrated all PCa epithelial cells (Epithelial PCa) with prostate epithelial cells from normal healthy controls from a previous analysis (Epithelial Normal)9 (Fig. 5a). We identified differentially expressed genes between tumor and normal samples across all three major types of epithelial cells (LE, BE, and club cells). We found ATF transcription factors FOS and JUN, members of the EGFR pathway that mediate gene regulation in response to cytokines and growth factors47, and prostate acid phosphatase (PSAP)48 as commonly upregulated genes across these cell types (Fig. 5b). However, when comparing between paired tumor and normal samples, no significant expression differences were detected for these DEGs (Supplementary Data 6), suggesting that compared to normal prostate samples, epithelial cells in the paired normal tissues were more similar to those from paired tumor tissues taken from different anatomical regions within the same radical prostatectomy specimen. Since the two PCa-enriched cell states in BE and club cells showed upregulated AR signaling compared to other BE or club cells, respectively, we tested AR expression in the integrated dataset and found that in PCa epithelial cells, 21.4% of BE (458 of 2145 cells), 28.6% of club cells (249 of 872), 52.7% of LE (2974 of 5647 cells) and 43.2% of tumor cells (1993 of 4658 cells) were AR+ , significantly higher compared to the same cell types from normal samples (P < 0.001, two-sided FET) (Fig. 5c). We also computed the Hallmark Androgen Response pathway signature scores for all cells and found that the three major epithelial cell types in PCa samples were all upregulated in AR signaling compared to normal samples (P < 0.001, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) (Fig. 5c).
To validate the two PCa-enriched epithelial cell states we identified in BE and club cells and test their correlation with upregulated AR signaling, we ran ssGSEA analysis on all BE and club cells on the Hallmark Androgen Response pathway. The AR signature score of BE was only significantly positively correlated to BE cluster 6 (information coefficient (IC) = 0.499, FDR q < 1e-5), and the AR signature score in club cells was significantly positively correlated to Club cell cluster 0 (IC = 0.385, FDR q < 1e-5) (Fig. 5d). Furthermore, to test if this correlation between a PCa-enriched cell state and AR signaling could be replicated in other PCa datasets, we projected all BE and club cell states across the TCGA25 (N = 499) and SU2C49 (N = 266) castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) bulk RNA-seq datasets (“Methods”). In both bulk RNA-seq datasets, AR signature scores were positively correlated with BE cluster 6 (IC = 0.756, FDR q < 1e-5) and Club cell cluster 0 (IC = 0.233, FDR q < 1e-5) (Fig. 5e), supporting our identification of cell states within BE cells and club cells that were more androgen-responsive and associated with prostate cancer.
Transcriptomic profiles of ERG+ tumor cells are patient-specific while ERG− tumor cells overlap with surrounding LE cells
While ERG+ tumor cells clustered separately from non-malignant LE cells, ERG− tumor cells resided more closely to non-malignant LE cells in the UMAP of all epithelial cells (Fig. 2c). To investigate this further, we first analyzed the sub-structure of ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells separately to identify distinct underlying cell states (Fig. 6a, b). ERG + tumor cells clustered in a patient-specific manner, whereas no such pattern was seen for ERG− tumor cells as most ERG− tumor cell states comprised more than one patient (Fig. 6c).
One possibility for the different distribution patterns between ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells is that ERG+ tumor cells for each patient represented a distinctive cell state driven by a shared dominant oncogenic alteration, the TMPRSS2-ERG fusion event, though no such distinction was seen in ERG− tumor cells, suggesting more overlapping cell states between ERG− tumor cells and adjacent non-malignant LE cells. To test this hypothesis, we integrated ERG+ tumor cells and ERG- tumor cells separately with LE cells and performed sub-clustering analysis. Overall, we found 1244 genes significantly varied between ERG+ tumor cells and LE cells (FDR q < 0.01, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) while only 314 genes were significantly varied between ERG− tumor cells and LE cells (FDR q < 0.01, Wilcoxon rank-sum test). Fourteen and seventeen cell states were recovered in the ERG+ and ERG- integrated datasets, respectively (Supplementary Fig. 6a, b). We observed a clear separation between ERG+ tumor cells and non-malignant LE cells while ERG− tumor cells were not clearly distinguishable from non-malignant LE in the analysis (Fig. 6d). From the cell-state composition comparison, we observed three cell states with more than 400 cells each that were almost exclusively detected in the ERG+ tumor cells, with each cell state largely attributed to one specific patient (Supplementary Fig. 6a). In contrast, no such patient specificity was observed for ERG− tumor cells (Fig. 6e) (Supplementary Fig. 6b). In our dataset, ERG + tumor cells were predominantly found in tumor samples while ERG− tumor cells were found in paired tumor and normal samples (Supplementary Fig. 6c). Using the DEGs between ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells (Supplementary Fig. 6d), we generated signature gene sets for both types of tumor cells and tested if the signatures of ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells generated from this dataset were correlated with TMPRSS2-ERG fusion status in TCGA25 and SU2C49 castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) bulk RNA-seq datasets. TMPRSS2-ERG fusion status was significantly positively correlated with an ERG + tumor cell signature score in both datasets (TCGA: information coefficient (IC) = 0.673, FDR q < 1e-5; SU2C: IC = 0.407, FDR q < 1e-5) and the absence of TMPRSS2-ERG fusion was significantly correlated with ERG- tumor signature scores (TCGA: IC = −0.554, FDR q < 1e-5; SU2C: IC = −0.211, FDR q < 1e-5) (Fig. 6f). These results supported the tumor cell signatures and our use of ERG expression as a classification in annotating tumor cells.
Furthermore, we compared the numbers of ERG+ tumor cell and ERG− tumor cells in each patient. Tumor cells in five patients were over 90% ERG− and over 90% ERG+ in two patients (Supplementary Fig. 6e), Tumor cells in four patients harbored both types of tumor cells. Using non-tumor epithelial cells as a reference, we found significantly different CNV profiles from the reference for each patient, further validating our tumor cell identification (Supplementary Fig. 6f). For our downstream analyses, we classified patients based on ERG status by annotating the five patients with almost exclusive ERG− tumor cells as ERG− patients and the other six patients (exclusive ERG+ tumor cells and mixtures) as ERG+ patients.
T-cell and stromal cell analysis reveals common signaling in ERG− patients
The transcriptional differences between ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells suggested that they might give rise to differential responses in the tumor microenvironment. To identify tumor-related immune cells and whether specific immune cell types were differentially enriched in either ERG + or ERG− samples, we analyzed the T-cell population and identified CD4 and CD8 T-cells, regulatory T-cells (Treg), and NK cells based on differentially expressed genes (Fig. 7a). We then stratified the T-cell populations based on ERG status and found two CD4 T-cell clusters that were differentially enriched. Of two CD4 T-cell clusters we identified, CD4 T-cell cluster 1 was enriched in ERG+ patients with a 2.73-fold difference (20.5% vs 7.5%) (Fig. 7b) and was characterized by a higher-level expression of immune response regulators including AP-1 receptors50 FOSB (log2 fold change (log2FC) = 1.79, FDR q = 5e-30), FOS (log2FC = 1.78, FDR q = 6.2e-26) and JUN (log2FC = 1.55, FDR q = 5.5e-22) (Supplementary Data 6). CD4 T-cell cluster 2 was enriched in ERG- patients with a 5.6 fold difference (9.5% vs 1.7%) (Fig. 7b) (P < 2.2e-16, two-sided FET) and was marked by higher expression of CXCR6 (log2FC = 1.31, FDR q = 1.5e-22), which was previously shown to be expressed in the type-1 polarized T-cell subset and to contribute to tumor progression51, and DUSP4 (log2FC = 1.30, FDR q = 1.4e-20). We noted that the DEGs between the two T-cell clusters were consistent with the DEGs identified between ERG+ and ERG− tumor cells, with FOSB, FOS, and JUN overexpressed in ERG+ tumor cells while CXCR6 and DUSP4 were overexpressed in ERG- tumor cells (Supplementary Fig. 6d). No other T-cell populations (CD8 T-cells, Treg, and NK cells) showed a significant difference in cell-type abundance between ERG+ and ERG− patients.
Similarly, we stratified the stromal population based on the ERG status of patients and identified three distinct populations, including endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and fibroblasts (Fig. 7c). Of these three stromal cell types, fibroblasts showed an enrichment in ERG + patients (P < 2.2e-16, two-sided FET) (Fig. 7d).
To test if the differences in the tumor cells between ERG− and ERG+ patients could potentially drive distinct and common stromal and immune responses, we ran independent GSEA analysis between ERG− and ERG+ tumor cells, CD4 T-cells, and stromal cells and computed the intersection of significantly upregulated gene sets in ERG- patients (FDR q < 0.1, Wilcoxon rank-sum test). Fourteen upregulated gene sets were identified that were commonly upregulated in ERG- tumor cells, CD4 T-cells, and stromal cells (P < 10e-20, multiset intersection exact test52) (Fig. 7e). However, GSEA analysis between ERG+ and ERG− patients for tumor cells, BE, non-malignant LE, and club cells using the C2CP gene-set collection did not detect any common pathway changes shared by these epithelial cell types. BE cells in ERG- patients were found to be significantly upregulated (q < 0.05) in 19 pathways in all 2500 C2CP collection, but no pathway was found to be significantly downregulated (q < 0.05). For club cells, no pathway was found to be significantly upregulated or downregulated in ERG− patients (q < 0.05) (Fig. 6f and Supplementary Data 5). The fourteen common upregulated gene sets in ERG− patients included Reactome PD-1 and Reactome interferon-gamma signaling (Fig. 7g), which have both been reported to be upregulated in advanced prostate cancers53,54. Within these two gene sets, we found that ERG- patient-enriched CD4 T-cells, tumor cells, and stromal cells showed significantly higher expression of a family of HLA genes compared to ERG+ cell populations (P < 0.05, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) (Fig. 7g). Within the T-cells, while there was no difference in the cell composition of CD8 T-cells based on ERG status, the ERG− CD8 T-cell population was also found to be upregulated in the Reactome PD-1 and Reactome interferon-gamma signaling signatures (FDR q < 0.1, Supplementary Data 5). To test if ERG− tumor cell-associated CD4 and CD8 T-cells could represent a distinct immune cell niche, we tested a series of exhausted, cytotoxic markers55 as well as genes in the PD-1 and Reactome interferon-gamma signaling pathway (Supplementary Data 7). We found that ERG− CD4 T-cells were significantly upregulated in exhausted T-cell markers PDCD1 (log2FC = 0.52, P < 0.01, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) and CTLA4 (log2FC = 1.79, P < 0.001, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) and cytotoxic markers GZMA (log2FC = 1.54, P < 0.001, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) and GZMB (log2FC = 1.09, P < 0.05, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) compared to ERG+ CD4 T-cells (Supplementary Fig. 7a, b). In addition, ERG− CD8 T-cells were upregulated in exhausted T-cell markers HAVCR2 (log2FC = 0.68, P < 0.05, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) and LAG3 (log2FC = 0.86, P < 0.001, Wilcoxon rank-sum test) compared to ERG+ CD8 T-cells (Supplementary Fig. 7a, b). These results suggested that CD4 and CD8 T-cells associated with ERG− tumor cells represented a more exhausted and cytotoxic phenotype. Then, using CD4 phenotype markers from a previous analysis56, we tested the expression of these markers in both ERG+ and ERG− CD4 T-cells and found a significantly higher proportion of CCR7 + central memory CD4 T-cells, GZMB+ cytotoxic CD4 T-cells and TOX+ exhausted CD4 T-cells56 associated with ERG− patients (Supplementary Fig. 7c). However, when testing T-cell activation markers such as CD69, TRFC, IL2RA, and HLA-DRA in both CD4 T-cells (Supplementary Fig. 7d) and CD8 T-cells (Supplementary Fig. 7e), no statistically significant difference in expression was detected between ERG+ and ERG− tumors, suggesting that ERG status was unlikely to be associated with higher T-cell activation.
Aside from T-cells, myeloid cells comprised the second largest immune cell population. Annotation of the myeloid cell population with SingleR19 yielded four cell types: neutrophils, eosinophils, macrophages, and monocytes (Supplementary Data 8 and Supplementary Fig. 8a, b). Within the myeloid cells, we did not detect any significant composition differences in monocytes or macrophages between RP paired tumor and paired normal samples or between ERG+ and ERG− patients (P > 0.05, two-sided FET) (Supplementary Fig. 8c).
To investigate the subtypes of monocytes and macrophages that are associated with tumor-related responses, we identified monocytes and macrophages with high expression of cell cycle markers MKI67 and TOP2A, indicating a cluster of proliferating myeloid cells (Supplementary Fig. 8d) that we termed MKI67+ myeloid cells. Monocytes were further classified by the expression of CD14 (Supplementary Fig. 8d). Within the macrophage population, we used previously established signatures57,58,59,60 of dichotomous phenotypes to classify macrophages into M0, M1, and M2 types, of which M1 macrophages have been described as pro-inflammatory and M2 macrophages as anti-inflammatory and associated with tumor progression61. We computed the signature scores of M1 and M2 macrophages and annotated the two subtypes accordingly, based on signature scores as well as M1 specific markers such as IL1A, CXCL3, and PTGS2, and M2-specific markers such as ARG1, CCL22, and FLT1. Neither M1 nor M2 macrophages were clustered separately from normal M0 macrophages, consistent with a previous analysis of macrophage subtypes59 (Supplementary Fig. 8d, e).
A recent study on macrophages categorized macrophages into resident tissue macrophages enriched in normal tissues (RTM) and tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) enriched in tumor tissues, which did not fit the M1/M2 phenotypes62,63. We did not detect RTMs within the PCa samples (Supplementary Fig. 8f). In contrast, TAMs were described as either C1QC+ or SPP1+ . These TAMs were reported to derive from FCN1 + monocyte-like macrophages, which was consistent with the detection of FCN1 in a cluster of PCa myeloid cells where we saw a mixture of monocytes and macrophages (Supplementary Fig. 8f). In total, 713 TAMs were identified but no significant difference in composition was detected between paired tumor and normal samples (77.9% vs 69.0%, p = 0.58, two-sided FET) (Supplementary Fig. 8g).
Another group of tumor-associated myeloid cells termed myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) has been characterized with roles in inflammation, establishing host immune homeostasis, and driving castration resistance in prostate cancer64,65,66,67. These MDSCs can inhibit anti-tumor reactivity of T cells and NK cells and the enrichment of MDSCs was correlated with tumor progression and worse clinical outcomes68. Two types of MDSCs have been described: monocytic MDSC (M-MDSC) characterized by high expression of CD11 and CD14 and low expression of HLA and CD15 and granulocytic or polymorphonuclear MDSC (PMN-MDSC) characterized by high expression of CD11 and CD15 and low expression of CD14. To test for the presence of these MDSCs in our PCa samples, we used the co-expression of these markers and identified 137 M-MDSCs within the 790 CD14+ monocytes and 11 PMN-MDSCs within 974 CD14- monocytes (Supplementary Fig. 8g). M-MDSCs were enriched in the paired tumor samples compared to paired normal (19.9% vs 3.6% of total monocytes, P = 0.0035, two-sided FET).
Prostate cancer organoids harbor epithelial cell types with uniquely expanded cell states in BE and club cells
To develop models to examine the cellular state heterogeneity revealed by single-cell analysis and to determine if we could reconstitute and propagate prostate cancer-associated club cells, we used established methods69,70 to generate localized prostate cancer organoids from single cells from six patients who underwent radical prostatectomies (four patients included in the tissue sample dataset) and characterized them using scRNA-seq within three passages (Fig. 8a). PCA-based clustering of organoid samples yielded 23 clusters from a total of 15,073 cells. We identified a total of six epithelial cell types with distinctive DEGs, based on cell-type signatures we generated from PCa tissue samples and established signatures from normal samples (Supplementary Data 2) (Fig. 8a), including BE cells characterized by high expression of DST, KRT15, KRT5, KRT17, and TP63, club cells characterized by PIGR, MMP7, CP, and CEACAM6, hillock cells, consistent with those in normal prostates showing high-level expression of KRT13, CLCA4, and SERPINB3, a mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) population expressing known MSC markers71,72,73 LAMC2, VIM, MMP1, and KLK7 and a population with high-level expression of cell cycle markers MKI67 and TOP2A termed MKI67 + epithelial cells (Supplementary Fig. 9a). Notably, within these early-passage organoids we identified a population fitting our profiling of ERG+ tumor cells, expressing a high level of LE cell markers (KLK3, KLK2, and ACPP) and tumor markers (PCA3, TRPM8, and ERG) (Supplementary Fig. 9a), which we annotated as putative tumor cells. Cell-type annotation was supported by ssGSEA, which showed that the MSC population was upregulated in the MSC signature gene set developed from a previous analysis72 and that the MKI67+ cluster was upregulated in a KEGG cell cycle signature indicating proliferating cells (Supplementary Fig. 9b). The tumor cells were validated by InferCNV21 estimation (Supplementary Fig. 9c). To confirm our recovery of the cell-type diversity in the organoids, we performed immunofluorescence staining for KRT8+ luminal and KRT5+ basal cells (Fig. 8b). We validated club cell proliferation in vitro by staining for SCGB1A1, an established club cell marker in the lung and prostate9, and lactoferrin (LTF), which was upregulated in the PCa-club cells identified by scRNA-seq (Fig. 8b).
To test the fidelity of the organoids as models for tumor tissues, we integrated the cells in the early-passage (P0-P3) organoid samples (N = 10,990) with the epithelial cells from the four RP specimens from which the organoids were derived (N = 8719) (Fig. 8c). Compared to PCa tissue samples, in the organoid samples, LE cell markers or signature scores could not identify a distinctive LE cell cluster in the organoid samples (Supplementary Fig. 9b), consistent with a previous study that LE cells were rarely captured in in vitro organoid cultures analyzed by scRNA-seq74. For the four patient-derived organoids, only a small number of tumor cells were captured compared to the parent tissues (tissue samples vs organoids, 34.11% vs 0.11%). However, hillock cells, MSCs, and a population of MKI67 + epithelial cells were exclusive to the organoid samples and were not observed in PCa tissue samples (Fig. 8d).
As BE and club cells were the two primary overlapping cell types between tissue and organoid samples (representing 11.9% and 29.0% of all cells, respectively, in the organoid samples), we took the subset of BE cells and club cells in tissue and organoid samples from the integrated dataset and computed the DEGs. BE markers KRT5, DST, and KRT15 were expressed in BE populations from tissue and organoids and club cell genes MMP7, LCN2, and CP were expressed in both club cell populations (Fig. 8e), suggesting similarities between tissue and organoid BE and club cells.
We then investigated BE and club cell populations by integrating organoids with tissue samples, respectively, to identify cell state differences in the organoid samples. We identified nine clusters in the integrated BE cell dataset with distinctive groups of DEGs (Supplementary Fig. 9d). Compared to BE cells in PCa tissue samples, significantly higher percentages of BE cells in organoids expressed KRT6A (organoid vs tissue, 77.4% vs 0.56%, P < 2.2e-16, two-sided FET), KRT14 (organoid vs tissue, 71.2% vs 18.6%, P < 2.2e-16, two-sided FET) and KRT23 (organoid vs tissue, 78.8% vs 20.2%, P < 0.001, two-sided FET) (Supplementary Fig. 9e).
Similarly, when analyzing the organoid club cells with club cells from PCa tissues, we identified a total of eight clusters with distinctive DEGs (Supplementary Fig. 9f) and observed an expansion of cell states in the organoid samples (Fig. 8f). Among the eight clusters, five were predominantly comprised of organoid club cells while club cells from prostate tissue were only found in clusters 3, 4, and 7. By comparing the expression levels of the top differentially expressed genes for these three clusters split by tissue and organoid club cells, we found that in cluster 3, hillock cell marker KRT13 was expressed in tissue and organoid club cells, suggesting an intermediate hillock-club cell state. In cluster 4, PCa-club cell marker PIGR was detected in 47% of organoid club cells (16 of 34) and 71% of tissue club cells (325 of 653). LTF was expressed in 15% of organoid club cells (5 of 34) compared to 50% tissue club cells (326 of 653), suggesting that LTF may be a PCa tissue-specific club cell marker. In contrast, the top DEGs for cluster 7 included LE markers such as ACPP, NKX3-1, KLK2, and KLK3, consistent with the profile of the previously identified PCa-enriched club cell state (Fig. 8g). In cluster 7, we observed approximately 20% of organoid club cells expressing at least one LE cell marker. This cluster scored higher for the PCa-enriched club cell state compared to all other clusters of organoid club cells, suggesting that PCa-enriched club cell states were also observed in organoid samples. Overall, we found that organoid samples harbored cell states found in tumor tissues and an enrichment of intermediate cell states. These organoid-enriched cell states within BE and club cells suggest that in vitro organoid models may provide useful models to study cell-state differences and identify lineage relationships to tumorigenesis.
Discussion
Studies of localized prostate cancer have been extensively performed with bulk RNA-seq and WES/WGS approaches that have provided key insights into the molecular features of prostate cancer9,12,63,64,65,66,75,76,77. Here, we performed single-cell analyses of localized PCa biopsies and radical prostatectomy specimens to characterize the heterogeneity of tumor cells, subpopulations of epithelial cells, stromal cells, and tumor microenvironments.
Of note, we identified a distinctive epithelial cell population of club cells that has not been previously observed in human prostate cancer samples. While club cells have been noted in normal prostates9,78,79, a population of club cells associated with prostate cancer suggests they may play a previously unappreciated role in carcinogenesis. Recent studies have identified a progenitor-like CD38low PIGRhigh PSCAhigh luminal epithelial cell sub-population with regenerative potential39,45,79. Based on the similarity of highly expressed genes including PIGR, MMP7, CP, and LTF, we believe those cells are consistent with their identity as club cells. In our analysis, prostate cancer club cells are characterized by the markedly lower expression of SCGB3A1 and LCN2 compared to club cells from normal healthy controls9. Based on our gene signature analyses, our results suggest that PCa-club cells are more androgen-responsive overall and harbor a highly androgen-responsive cell state that may play a supporting role for the overall androgen-responsive cellular milieu of prostate cancer80,81.
SCGB3A1, a marker for club cells, was one of the top downregulated genes in prostate cancer club cells compared to club cells from normal healthy control prostates. SCGB3A1 may play a tumor suppressor role in a number of cancers including breast, prostate, and lung as its expression has been noted to be markedly lower in cancer tissues compared to normal tissue82. Prostate club cells in the normal epithelia may play a tumor suppressor role through secretion of SCGB3A1 which is then downregulated in concert with prostate cancer progression, as marked by our finding of SCGB3A1low club cells in prostate cancer tissues that can be propagated in organoids. We did not find a distinct population of hillock cells in prostate cancer tissues so it is possible that hillock cells may be depleted in prostate cancer progression.
Consistent with other cancer single-cell studies in which tumor cells cluster separately, ERG+ tumor cells clustered separately by patient from non-malignant epithelial clusters14,55,83,84,85. However, our analysis of ERG− tumor cells unexpectedly found that ERG− tumors did not cluster by patient and we observed a shared heterogeneity for ERG- tumor cells with non-malignant luminal cells. The identification of tumor cells in this study was largely based on the CNV estimation using the non-malignant epithelial cells as reference. Given the relatively shallow sequencing depth of scRNA-seq, we acknowledge that it was possible that small focal CNV changes might not be well captured in our analysis.
Our single-cell analysis reveals insights into the tumor immune microenvironment of localized prostate cancer based on ERG status. We hypothesized that ERG− tumor cells might evoke similar tumor microenvironment responses and found common transcriptional pathways that were upregulated in the tumor, stroma, and CD4 T-cell populations of ERG− patients, including the PD-1 and interferon-gamma signaling pathway, suggesting that ERG- tumor cells may give rise to a distinct immune cell niche and tumor microenvironment. While immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) has had limited efficacy in advanced castration-resistant prostate cancers42,44,86,87,88,89,90, we speculate that there may be targeted trials in ERG- hormone-sensitive prostate cancers that may be more beneficial with ICI or other emerging immunotherapies that are currently in clinical trials.
We note a potential limitation of our analysis in the identification of ERG− tumor cells as we also found evidence for ERG− tumor cells in paired grossly normal specimens. This could be attributed to tumor cells also being present in the seemingly normal tissues from radical prostatectomy specimens14,85,91,92. Analysis of somatic mutations or structural variants on a single-cell level will help confirm our identification of ERG- tumor cells and inform our understanding of their heterogeneity.
Furthermore, we found that PCa-enriched epithelial cell states identified in the tumor tissues were also present in in vitro organoid cultures grown from tumor specimens. We identified cell types that emerged in the organoid samples but were not observed in the tumor tissues, including hillock cells, MSC, and MKI67+ epithelial cells. The mechanisms by which hillock cells can propagate in organoid cultures but not be found in the localized tumor tissue specimens are still to be delineated. An expansion of cell states in BE and club cells in the organoids suggests a broader view of their capacity for cell-state transitions. Our analysis suggests that prostate cancer epithelial organoids harbor many major cell types from tissue and may provide a useful model to investigate cell-state plasticity in the context of selective pressures and genetic perturbations. However, in contrast to previous studies on organoids generated from prostate samples, we did not observe a distinctive NKX3-1+ /KLK3+ /AR+ luminal cell population69,93,94. This might be due to a limitation of detection using single-cell sequencing technology or that we could not robustly grow differentiated luminal cells74. We detected a population of “tumor-like” cells largely from one patient organoid. It is possible that these “tumor-like” cells are present only initially in some organoids but dissipate after several passages.
Comparing epithelial cells from PCa samples with those from normal healthy controls revealed distinct high androgen-signaling cell states that were enriched in PCa samples. We found that epithelial cells from PCa tissues were generally upregulated in AR signaling. Given our identification of shared luminal-like, highly androgen-responsive cell states across basal and club cell populations, we posit that these cell types may be primed for tumor cell transformation and may also promote prostate tumorigenesis. Further studies with lineage tracing and dissection of single-cell somatic alterations within these specific cell states will be informative for further characterization of their potential tumorigenic roles. The identification of a tumor-associated club cell population raises the possibility that these cells contribute to the interactions between tumor cells and their surrounding epithelial microenvironment. Furthermore, our analyses identify cell-type-specific signature gene sets within prostate cancer samples that should contribute to a more precise and thorough classification of cells during prostate carcinogenesis. In summary, we provide a single-cell transcriptomic blueprint of localized prostate cancer that identifies and highlights the multicellular milieu and cellular states associated with prostate tumorigenesis. Our results provide insights into the epithelial microenvironment and the cellular state changes associated with prostate cancer toward improved PCa diagnosis.
Methods
Experimental details
Sample collection
We obtained a total of six prostate biopsies from three different patients (two biopsies each for patient 1–3, obtained at the same time point), four radical prostatectomies (RP) with tumor-only samples from four patients (patients 4–7), and four radical prostatectomies with matched normal samples from four patients (patients 8–11). All RP patients had lesions that were visible on preoperative MRI or ultrasound and were later confirmed pathologically to be cancer (Supplementary Fig. 2a). Matched normal samples were taken from normal regions). Clinical/pathological data available for the samples is in Supplementary Data 1. Of these 11 patients, only one patient (patient 4) was treated with finasteride.
Study approval
The UCSF Institutional Review Board (IRB) committee approved the collection of these patient data included in this study. All relevant ethical regulations for work with human participants have been compiled and written informed consent was obtained.
Tissue dissociation
Tissue samples were minced with surgical scissors and washed with RP-10 (RPMI + 10% FBS). Each sample was centrifuged at 259×g for 5 min, resuspended in 10 mL digestive media (HBSS + 1% HEPES) with Liberase TM (Roche, Cat: 5401119001) or 1000 U/mL collagenase type IV (Worthington, Cat: LS004188), and rotated for 30 min at 37 °C. Samples were triturated by pipetting ten times after every 10 min during the incubation or by pipetting 15 times at the end of the incubation. Each sample was filtered through a 70-µm filter (Falcon, Cat: 352350), washed with RP-10, centrifuged at 259×g for 5 min, washed again with RP-10, and resuspended in RP-10. A hemocytometer was used to count the cells.
Single-cell RNA sequencing
Sequencing was largely based on the Seq-Well S^3 protocol13,95. One to four arrays were used per sample. Each array was loaded as previously described with approximately 110,000 barcoded mRNA capture beads (ChemGenes, Cat: MACOSKO-2011-10(V+)) and with 10,000–20,000 cells. Arrays were sealed with functionalized polycarbonate membranes (Sterlitech, Cat: PCT00162X22100) and were incubated at 37 °C for 40 min.
After sealing, each array was incubated in lysis buffer (5 M guanidine thiocyanate, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5% sarkosyl, 1% BME). After detachment and removal of the top slides, arrays were rotated at 50 rpm for 20 min. Each array was washed with hybridization buffer (2 M NaCl, 4% PEG8000) and was then rocked in a hybridization buffer for 40 min. Beads from different arrays were collected separately. Each array was washed ten times with wash buffer (2 M NaCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 20 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 4% PEG8000) and scraped ten times with a glass slide to collect beads into a conical tube.
For each array, beads were washed with Maxima RT buffer (ThermoFisher, Cat: EP0753) and resuspended in reverse transcription mastermix with Maxima RT buffer, PEG8000, Template Switch Oligo, dNTPs (NEB, Cat: N0447L), RNase inhibitor (Life Technologies, Cat: AM2696) and Maxima H Minus Reverse Transcriptase (ThermoFisher, Cat: EP0753) in water. Samples were rotated end-to-end, first at room temperature for 15 min and then at 52 °C overnight. Beads were washed once with TE-SDS and twice with TE-TW. They were treated with exonuclease I (NEB), rotating for 50 min at 37 °C. Beads were washed once with TE-SDS and twice with TE-TW, and once with 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0. They were resuspended in 0.1 M NaOH and rotated for 5 min at room temperature. They were subsequently washed with TE-TW and TE. They were taken through second strand synthesis with Maxima RT buffer, PEG8000, dNTPs, dN-SMRT oligo, and Klenow Exo- (NEB, Cat: M0212L) in water. After rotating at 37 °C for 1 h, beads were washed twice with TE-TW, once with TE and once with water.
KAPA HiFi Hotstart Readymix PCR Kit (Kapa Biosystems, Cat: KK2602) and SMART PCR Primer (Supplementary Data 9) were used in whole transcriptome amplification (WTA). For each array, beads were distributed among 24 PCR reactions. Following WTA, three pools of eight reactions were made and were then purified using SPRI beads (Beckman Coulter), first at 0.6× and then at a 0.8× volumetric ratio.
For each sample, one pool was run on an HSD5000 tape (Agilent, Cat: 5067–5592). The concentration of DNA for each of the three pools was measured via the Qubit dsDNA HS Assay kit (ThermoFisher, Cat: Q33230). Libraries were prepared for each pool, using 800–1000 pg of DNA and the Nextera XT DNA Library Preparation Kit. They were dual-indexed with N700 and N500 oligonucleotides.
Library products were purified using SPRI beads, first at 0.6× and then at a 1× volumetric ratio. Libraries were then run on an HSD1000 tape (Agilent, Cat: 50675584) to determine the concentration between 100–1000 bp. For each library, 3 nM dilutions were prepared. These dilutions were pooled for sequencing on a NovaSeq S4 flow cell.
The sequenced data were preprocessed and aligned using the dropseq_workflow on Terra (app.terra.bio). A digital gene expression matrix was generated for each sample, parsed, and analyzed following a customized pipeline. Additional details are provided below.
Whole-exome sequencing
The remaining frozen single cells from the prostate tumor and matching normal specimens (N = 3 patients) were processed for genomic DNA and underwent whole-exome sequencing (Novogene). Sequencing data were then aligned to the GRCh38/hg38 reference genome. Somatic single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) were identified using our in-house pipeline which integrated somatic variant caller Mutect2 and annotation using Funcotator96. The list of SNVs was further filtered using the following criteria: (a) variants with less than a minimum read depth of ten reads were excluded, (b) variants with less than three supporting reads of the altered nucleotide were excluded, (c) variants with a variant allele frequency of less than 5% were excluded. Somatic copy number alterations were identified using the GATK somatic CNV pipeline96.
Organoid culture
Isolated single cells not used for single-cell sequencing were additionally frozen in FBS + 10% DMSO, flash-frozen on dry ice, or plated in Matrigel to grow as 3D prostate organoid cultures. Organoid cultures were established by plating 20,000 cells in 25 µL Matrigel (Corning, Cat: 356231) in 48-well flat-bottom plates (Corning, Cat: EK-47102). Prostate-specific serum-free culture media contained 500 ng/mL human recombinant R-spondin (R&D Systems, Cat: 10820-904), 10 µM SB202190 (Sigma, Cat: S7076), 1 µM prostaglandin E3 (Tocris, Cat: 229610), 1 nM FGF10 (Peprotech, Cat: 100-26), 5 ng/mL FGF2 (Peprotech, Cat: 100-18B), 10 ng/mL 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone (Sigma, Cat: D-073-1ML), 100 ng/mL human Noggin (Peprotech, Cat: 102-10 C), 500 nM A83-01 (Fischer, Cat: 29-391-0), 5 ng/mL human EGF (Peprotech, Cat: AF-100-15), 1.25 mM N-acetyl-cysteine (Sigma, Cat: A9165), 10 mM Nicotinamide (Sigma, Cat: N3376), 1× B-27 (Gibco, Cat: 17504044), 1× P/S (Gibco, Cat: 15140122), 10 mM HEPES (Gibco, Cat: 15630080), and 2 mM GlutaMAX (Gibco, Cat: 35050061)70. In addition, 10 µM Y-27 (Biogems, Cat: 1293823) was included during the first 2 weeks of growth and after passaging to promote growth70. Generally, organoid growth was apparent within 2–3 days and robust after 2 weeks. In total, 250 µL media was refreshed every 2–4 days using media stored at 4 °C for a maximum of 10 days. Organoid growth was monitored using an EVOS-FL microscope.
To passage prostate organoid cultures every 7–14 days, culture media was replaced with 300 µL TrypLE (1×, Gibco, Cat: 12604013). Individual domes were collected into 15-mL Falcon tubes, disrupted by pipetting with wide-orifice tips, and incubated at 37 °C for 30 min. Following incubation, the dissociation media was neutralized using 10 mL wash media: adDMEM/F12 containing 5% FBS, P/S, 10 mM HEPES (1 M, Gibco, Cat: 15630080) and 2 mM GlutaMAX (100×, Gibco, Cat: 35050061)70. Cells were spun down at 500 G for 5 min and resuspended in 2 mL wash media. Finally, the media was aspirated, cells were resuspended in Matrigel, and 25 µL/dome were plated per well.
Organoids were accessed using single-cell sequencing at an early passage (P0-4). To isolate single cells from Matrigel, organoids were collected in 500 µL Trypsin (0.25%, Gibco, Cat: 25-200-056) and incubated at 37 °C for 30–45 min until few clumps were visible. Throughout incubation, cells were triturated every 5 min. Single cells were resuspended in 9 mL DMEM + 5% FBS + 0.05 mM EDTA and passed through a 40-µm filter, followed by an additional wash of the filter with 1 mL DMEM + 5% FBS + 0.05 mM EDTA. Cells were spun down at 300 G for 5 min, resuspended in 10 mL of the same media, spun down again, and finally, resuspended in 1–2 mL media. Cells were counted using a hemocytometer and loaded onto arrays for single-cell sequencing as described for patient tissues.
Immunofluorescence
Organoids were passaged into eight-well Nunc Lab-Tek II Chamber Slides (Thermo Scientific, Cat: 154453) and allowed to grow in prostate-specific media. Following 7 days, the media was removed, domes were washed twice with 300 µL PBS and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (Electron Microscopy Sciences, Cat: 15710-S) at room temperature for 20 min. Individual domes were washed 3× with IF Buffer (0.02% Triton + 0.05% Tween + PBS) and blocked for 1 h at room temperature with 0.5% Triton X100 + 1% DMSO + 1% BSA + 5% donkey serum + PBS. Following the block, domes were washed once with IF Buffer and incubated overnight with monoclonal mouse anti-Lactoferrin (Abcam, Cat: ab10110, 1 µg/mL), monoclonal rat anti-Uteroglobin/SCGB1A1 (R&D Systems, Cat: MAB4218-SP, 1 µg/mL), polyclonal guinea pig anti-Cytokeratin 8 + 18 (Fitzgerald, Cat: 20R-CP004, 1:100), and polyclonal chicken anti-keratin 5 (Biolegend, Cat: 905901, 1:100). Subsequently, domes were washed 3× with IF Buffer and counterstained with Alexa Fluor 488-AffiniPure donkey anti-chicken IgY (IgG) (H + L) (Jackson ImmunoResearch, Cat: 703-545-155, 1:500), donkey anti-mouse IgG (H + L) cross-adsorbed secondary antibody, DyLight 550 (ThermoFisher Scientific, Cat: SA5-10167, 1:500), donkey anti-rat IgG (H + L) cross-adsorbed secondary antibody, DyLight 680 (ThermoFisher Scientific, Cat: SA5-10030, 1:500), and Alexa Fluor 790 AffiniPure donkey anti-guinea pig IgG (H + L) (Jackson ImmunoResearch, Cat: 706-655-148, 1:500) containing DAPI (Sigma, Cat: D9542-5MG, 1:1000). Finally, wells were washed 3× with IF Buffer for 5 min and sealed with Prolong Gold antifade mountant (Fischer Sci, Cat: P36930). Z-stack images were captured on a Leica DCF9000 GT using Leica Application System X software.
Quantification and statistical analysis
Sequencing and alignment
Sequencing results were returned as paired FASTQ reads and processed with FastQC97 (v0.11.9) for general quality checks in order to further improve our experimental protocol. Then, the paired FASTQ files were aligned against the reference genome using a STAR aligner98 (v2.7.6a) built within the dropseq workflow (Snapshot 7) (https://cumulus.readthedocs.io/en/latest/drop_seq.html). The aligning pipeline output included aligned and corrected bam files, two digital gene expression (DGE) matrix text files (a raw read count matrix and a UMI-collapsed read count matrix where multiple reads that matched the same UMI would be collapsed into one single UMI count) and text-file reports of basic sample qualities such as the number of beads used in the sequencing run, total number of reads, alignment logs. For each sample, the average number of reads was 4,875,9687, and the mean read depth per barcode was 48,586. The median and the average number of genes per barcode were 767 and 1079. The median and average number of UMI were 1335 and 2447. The mean percentage of mitochondrial content per cell was 13.65%.
Single-cell clustering analysis
Cells in the samples were clustered and analyzed using customized codes based on the Seurat package (v3.2.2) in R20 (v4.0.3). Cells with less than 300 genes, 500 transcripts, or a mitochondrial level of 20% or greater, were filtered out as the first QC process. Then, by examining the distribution histogram of the number of genes per cell in each sample, we set the upper threshold for the number of genes per cell in each individual sample in order to filter potential doublets. A total of 22,037 cells were acquired using these thresholds. Since merging with and without integration of the samples showed no major difference in the clustering of each cell type, in the subsequent analysis of these samples we used the merged dataset without integration.
Doublets were removed by two steps: first, we used DoubletFinder99 (v2.0.3) and a theoretical doublet rate of 5% to locate doublets in our dataset. 305 cells marked by DoubletFinder as true positive were removed from further analysis. 21,743 cells were used in the following cell clustering analysis. Then, after clustering, we removed cells expressing biomarkers from more than one major cell type (epithelial, stromal, and immune) as they were more likely to be doublets. In this step, we removed 276 cells from our dataset and the follow-up analysis, leaving 21,467 cells in total.
UMI-collapsed read counts matrices for each cell were loaded in Seurat for analysis20. We followed the standard workflow by using the “LogNormalize” method that normalized the gene expression for each cell by the total expression, multiplying by a scale factor 10,000 and log-transforming the results. For downstream analysis to identify different cell types, we then calculated and returned the top 2000 most variably expressed genes among the cells before applying a linear scaling by shifting the expression of each gene in the dataset so that the mean expression across cells was 0 and the variance was 1. This way, the gene expression level could be comparable among different cells and genes. PCA was run using the previously determined most variably expressed genes for linear dimensional reduction and the first 100 principal components (PCs) were stored which accounted for 25.42% of the total variance. To determine how many PCs to use for the clustering, a JackStraw resampling method was implemented by permutation on a subset of data (1% by default) and rerunning PCA for a total of 100 replications to select the statistically significant principle component to include for the K-nearest neighbors clustering. For graph-based clustering, the first 100 PC and a resolution of 3 were selected yielding a total of 46 cell clusters. We eliminated the clustering side effect due to overclustering by constructing a cluster tree of the average expression profile in each cluster and merging clusters together based on their positions in the cluster tree. As a result, we ensured that each cluster would have at least 10 unique differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Differentially expressed genes in each cluster were identified using the FindAllMarker() function built within Seurat package and a corresponding p-value was given by the Wilcoxon’s test followed by a Bonferroni correction. Top differentially expressed gene markers were illustrated in a stacked violin plot using a customized auxiliary function. Dot plots were generated as an alternative way of visualization using the top ten differentially expressed genes in each cluster. Top tier cell-type clustering was also validated by the automated singleR (v1.2.4) annotation (Supplementary Data 1). However, when running singleR in single-cell mode for epithelial cells, and due to the lack of detailed reference in the singleR library, singleR could not identify detailed epithelial cell types. Therefore, manual annotation was required for epithelial cells.
Cell-type annotation by signature scores
In order to annotate each cell type from the previous clustering, we took the established studies and the signatures for each cell type (Supplementary Data 2). Treating the signature score of each cell type as a pseudogene, we evaluated the signature score for each cell in our dataset using the AddModuleScore() function built within Seurat20. Each cluster in our dataset was assigned with an annotation of its cell type by top signature scores within the cluster.
Epithelial sub-clustering analysis and tumor cell inference
All epithelial cells were clustered using the analytical workflow described above, yielding 20 clusters. To compare the transcriptomic profiles between PCa samples and normal prostates, a previous study on normal prostate single-cell RNA-seq was downloaded and imported. Mean basal, luminal, hillock, and club signature scores were calculated for each cluster, based on the top differentially expressed genes from a previous scRNA-seq study on the normal prostate. A One-way ANOVA test was then conducted to determine if the signature score of each cluster was significantly different from the rest. We annotated the clusters with significantly upregulated basal epithelial cell (BE) signature scores as BE. Cells in clusters with high luminal epithelial (LE) signature scores could be either non-malignant luminal epithelial cells or tumor cells. The clusters with low signature scores of both BE and LE were annotated as other epithelial cells (OE). To efficiently identify tumor cells, we took the digital gene expression matrix and conducted a single-set gene-set enrichment analysis on GenePattern (https://gsea-msigdb.github.io/ssGSEA-gpmodule/v10/index.html) testing against the C2 gene-set collection. Under the notion that tumor cells should have higher expression of one or more tumor markers overlapping existing prostate cancer gene sets, we projected the signatures of these prostate cancer gene sets onto our epithelial clusters and annotated tumor cell clusters as the clusters with significantly higher signature scores of at least one prostate cancer gene sets.
Approximately ~50% of prostate cancer cells from men of European ancestry harbor TMPRSS2-ERG fusion events, indicating high gene expression of ERG100,101. Therefore, we hypothesized a high signature score of SETLUR PROSTATE CANCER TMPRSS2-ERG FUSION UP gene set26 would be a strong indicator of ERG+ tumor cells. All the other tumor cell clusters were then annotated as ERG- tumor cell clusters as they showed little to no ERG gene expression. All of the epithelial clusters with high luminal signature scores and high expression of luminal markers such as KLK3, KLK2, ACPP, KRT8, and KRT18 were annotated as non-malignant luminal epithelial cells (non-malignant LE). Compared to non-malignant cells, tumor cells harbor more single-nucleotide variants and copy number variants, leading to distinctive patterns. To validate our tumor cell annotation, we ran InferCNV (v1.4.0) on ERG+ and ERG− tumor clusters with non-malignant LEs as reference29 for estimation of copy number alterations. We classified tumor cells based on ERG gene expression. Then we defined patients harboring ERG + tumor cells as ERG + patients and the other patients as ERG− patients. This way, we were able to classify all the other cells based on the ERG status (epithelial, stromal, and immune cells) as either ERG+ or ERG−.
To determine if common functional changes were present in more than one cell type, we conducted gene-set enrichment analysis (GSEA) for each cell type first and imported the significantly changed gene sets to take the intersections. The statistical significance of multiset intersection was evaluated and visualized using the SuperExacTest package52 (v1.0.7).
Cell-state analysis
Gene expression profile differences in epithelial cells between PCa sample and normal prostate samples were identified by integrating our PCa dataset with an established dataset on normal prostates9. We utilized the integration method based on commonly expressed anchor genes by following the Seurat integration vignette20 (v3.2.2) in order to remove batch effects of samples sequenced with different technologies and possible artifacts so that the cells were comparable.
In order to better characterize the transcriptomic profile and transition of cell states among identified epithelial cells, both the tumor and paired normal samples were integrated together and separately with the epithelial cells from a normal prostate scRNA-seq dataset9 for KRT5+ and KRT15+ basal epithelial (BE), KLK3+ , and ACPP+ luminal epithelial (LE) and PIGR+ and MMP7+ club cell population together and separately. An optimal resolution value was tested using the Clustree102 package (v0.4.3). Heatmaps of DEGs were generated to validate the cell-state differentiation. Compositions for each cell state was computed and compared between PCa samples and normal samples using Fisher’s exact test.
To assess the functional roles of the PCa-enriched cell states identified within the integrated dataset, we ran GSEA analysis between the PCa-enriched cell state and all the other cell states as a whole. The top 20 downregulated and upregulated gene sets were visualized in terms of gene counts and ratio for each gene set. Using the DEGs from each cell state, we generated signature gene sets for all the cell states in BE, LE, and club cells. To validate the functional implications for the PCa-enriched cell states, we conducted a single-set gene-set enrichment analysis (ssGSEA) on PCa BE and club cells to compute the signature scores of the upregulated gene sets using the ssGSEA module on GenePattern (https://gsea-msigdb.github.io/ssGSEA-gpmodule/v10/index.html). Then, we computed the information coefficient (IC) and corresponding P values followed by FDR correction to evaluate the correlation between these gene sets and cell states.
Pseudotime analysis
To evaluate the epithelial cell states with respect to their order in the differentiation trajectory, we conducted pseudotime analysis on all epithelial and tumor cells identified in the PCa samples. We first calculated a PAGA (partition-based graph abstraction) graph using SCANPY’s sc.tl.paga() function103 (v1.8.1) and then used sc.tl.draw_graph() to generate the PAGA initialized single-cell embedding of the cell types. The diffusion pseudotime for each cell was calculated using SCANPY’s sc.tl.diffmap() and sc.tl.dpt() with the root cluster as the BE cluster and then was plotted on the PAGA initialized embedding. We then visualized the gene marker changes along the pseudotime by cell type using sc.pl.paga_path().
scRNA-seq fusion detection
Fusion transcripts were detected using STAR-Fusion27 (v1.6.0). STAR-Fusion was run from a Docker container using the following options: -FusionInspectorvalidate, -examine_coding_effect, and –denovo_reconstruct. Due to the low coverage of scRNA-seq samples, both filtered fusion detection results and preliminary results were combined and processed, in which we only filtered for potential TMPRSS2-ERG fusion events.
Bulk RNA-sequencing validation
Two publicly available bulk RNA-sequencing PCa datasets were used to test the correlation between the PCa-enriched cell-state signatures and AR signaling, including Prostate Adenocarcinoma (TCGA25, Firehose Legacy) dataset (N = 499, available at https://www.cbioportal.org/study/summary?id=prad_tcga), Metastatic Prostate Cancer, SU2C/PCF Dream Team (SU2C49, PNAS 2019) dataset (N = 266, available at https://www.cbioportal.org/study/summary?id=prad_su2c_2019). For each dataset, mRNA expression was downloaded and normalized. Signature scores of AR signaling (Hallmark androgen response pathway), BE, LE, and club cell states as well as ERG + and ERG− tumor cell signature scores were computed for each sample via ssGSEA analysis. Samples in each dataset were rank-ordered by the AR signature scores and heatmaps were generated using the customized scripts. To test the correlation between AR signature scores and each cell-state signature score, we computed the information coefficient and corresponding P values followed by FDR correction to evaluate the correlation. For tumor cell signatures, we computed the correlations between the ERG fusion status from each dataset and the signature scores of ERG+ and ERG− tumor cell gene sets we had previously generated. We ranked ordered the bulk RNA-seq samples according to whether or not the TMPRSS2-ERG fusion was detected and plotted the ERG+ and ERG− tumor cell signature score heatmaps. Information coefficient (IC), P values, and FDR q values were computed.
Immune cell analysis
T-cell and myeloid cell populations were sub-clustered separately following a similar pipeline as described above. For T-cells, 23 PCs and a resolution of 1.5 were selected for the clustering. For myeloid cells, 27 PCs and a resolution of 1.5 were selected. Cell clusters were annotated by a dot plot showing the top ten most expressed genes in each cluster.
Monocytes, macrophages, neutrophils, and eosinophils were identified and annotated based on the automated SingleR analysis19. M1, M2 macrophage phenotypes, tumor-associated macrophages, and two types of myeloid-derived suppressor cells were identified using documented markers from previous studies.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
Raw single-cell RNA-sequencing FASTQ files and gene expression matrices files generated in this study have been deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) under accession number GSE176031. Whole-exome sequencing FASTQ files of the three primary prostate cancer patients in this study have been deposited in the European Genome-phenome Archive (EGA) under accession number EGAS00001005685. The Henry et al. normal human prostate scRNA-seq dataset9 is available in the NCBI GEO database under accession number GSE117403. Two previously published datasets were processed and used for testing our PCa-associated club cell characterization. Raw gene count matrices files were downloaded from GSE146811 [Kauthaus et al. dataset45] and GSE141445 [Chen et al. dataset46]. RNA-seq data for signature validation are available at cBioportal [TCGA, SU2C]. Curated gene-set collections in this study (Hallmark, C2CP, and C2CGP) can be found at MsigDB. Source data are provided with this paper.
Materials availability
This study did not generate new unique reagents.
Code availability
All software algorithms used for analysis are available for download from public repositories. All code used to generate figures in the manuscript will be made available in the following Github repository: https://github.com/angelussong/scRNA-seq-Analysis-of-Prostate-Cancer-Samples. Source data are provided to generate figures in the manuscript.
Change history
17 March 2022
The Peer Review file was missing from this article and has now been uploaded.
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Acknowledgements
This work was in part supported by Searle Scholars Program (A.K.S.), Beckman Young Investigator Program (A.K.S.), Sloan Fellowship in Chemistry (A.K.S.), and the Pew-Stewart Scholars Program for Cancer Research (A.K.S.), Department of Defense grant W81XWH-17-PCRP-HD (F.W.H.), National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute grant P20 CA233255 (F.W.H.), Prostate Cancer Foundation Challenge Award 19CHAS03 (F.W.H.) and Young Investigator Award (F.W.H.), Benioff Initiative for Prostate Cancer Research (F.W.H.). We thank Norma Neff and the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub for help with sequencing.
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Conceptualization: H.S., M.R.C., A.K.S., and F.W.H.; methodology: H.S., H.N.W., P.A., E.A.C., M.H.W., B.W., and F.W.H.; formal analysis: H.S., H.N.W., P.A., M.H.W., J.X., A.K.S., and F.W.H.; investigation: H.S., H.N.W., P.A., M.H.W., J.X., H.Y., K.L.L., B.A.S., and F.W.H.; data curation: H.S. and J.X.; writing—original draft: H.S. and F.W.H.; writing—review & editing: H.S., H.N.W., P.A., M.H.W., J.X., F.Y.F., P.R.C, M.R.C., A.K.S., and F.W.H.; resources: H.Y., P.C., B.W., M.R.C., A.K.S., and F.W.H.; supervision: F.W.H.
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A.K.S. reports compensation for consulting and/or SAB membership from Merck, Honeycomb Biotechnologies, Cellarity, Hovione, Repertoire Immune Medicines, Ochre Bio, Third Rock Ventures, Relation Therapeutics, and Dahlia Biosciences. F.Y.F. reports compensation for consulting and/or SAB membership from Astellas, Bayer, Blue Earth Diagnostics, Celgene, Genentech, Janssen Oncology, Myovant, Roivant, Sanofi, PFS Genomics, and SerImmune. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
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Song, H., Weinstein, H.N.W., Allegakoen, P. et al. Single-cell analysis of human primary prostate cancer reveals the heterogeneity of tumor-associated epithelial cell states. Nat Commun 13, 141 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27322-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27322-4
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