Vitamin D sufficiency enhances differentiation of patient-derived prostate epithelial organoids.
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IF: 6.107
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Cited by: 11
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Datasets
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Abstract

Vitamin D is an essential steroid hormone that regulates systemic calcium homeostasis and cell fate decisions. The prostate gland is hormonally regulated, requiring steroids for proliferation and differentiation of secretory luminal cells. Vitamin D deficiency is associated with an increased risk of lethal prostate cancer, which exhibits a dedifferentiated pathology, linking vitamin D sufficiency to epithelial differentiation. To determine vitamin D regulation of prostatic epithelial differentiation, patient-derived benign prostate epithelial organoids were grown in vitamin D-deficient or -sufficient conditions. Organoids were assessed by phenotype and single-cell RNA sequencing. Mechanistic validation demonstrated that vitamin D sufficiency promoted organoid growth and accelerated differentiation by inhibiting canonical Wnt activity and suppressing Wnt family member DKK3. Wnt and DKK3 were also reduced by vitamin D in prostate tissue explants by spatial transcriptomics. Wnt dysregulation is a known contributor to aggressive prostate cancer, thus findings further link vitamin D deficiency to lethal disease.

Keywords

Spatial Transcriptomics
Cell Biology
Developmental Biology

Authors

McCray, Tara
Pacheco, Julian V
Loitz, Candice C
Garcia, Jason
Baumann, Bethany
Schlicht, Michael J
Valyi-Nagy, Klara
Abern, Michael R
Nonn, Larisa

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