Wilson C, Leiblich A, Goberdhan D C I, Hamdy F
University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Curr Top Dev Biol. 2017;121:339-375. doi: 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2016.06.001. Epub 2016 Jul 25.
The human prostate is a gland of the male reproductive tract, which together with the seminal vesicles, is responsible for most seminal fluid production. It is a common site of cancer, and unlike other glands, it typically enlarges in aging men. In flies, the male accessory glands make many major seminal fluid components. Like their human equivalents, they secrete proteins from several conserved families, including proteases, lectins, and cysteine-rich secretory proteins, some of which interact with sperm and affect fertility. A key protein, sex peptide, is not conserved in vertebrates but plays a central role in mediating long-term effects on females after mating. Although postmitotic, one epithelial cell type in the accessory glands, the secondary cell, continues to grow in adults. It secretes microvesicles called exosomes from the endosomal multivesicular body, which, after mating, fuse with sperm. They also appear to affect female postmating behavior. Remarkably, the human prostate epithelium also secretes exosomes, which fuse to sperm in vitro to modulate their activity. Exosomes from prostate and other cancer cells are increasingly proposed to play fundamental roles in modulating the tumor microenvironment and in metastasis. Here we review a diverse accessory gland literature, which highlights functional analogies between the male reproductive glands of flies and humans, and a critical role for extracellular vesicles in allowing seminal fluid to promote male interests within the female. We postulate that secondary cells and prostate epithelial cells use common mechanisms to control growth, secretion, and signaling, which are relevant to prostate and other cancers, and can be genetically dissected in the uniquely tractable fly model.
人类前列腺是男性生殖道的一个腺体,它与精囊一起,负责产生大部分精液。它是癌症的常见发生部位,与其他腺体不同的是,它通常会在老年男性中增大。在果蝇中,雄性附腺产生许多主要的精液成分。与人类的同类组织一样,它们分泌来自几个保守家族的蛋白质,包括蛋白酶、凝集素和富含半胱氨酸的分泌蛋白,其中一些与精子相互作用并影响生育能力。一种关键蛋白质——性肽,在脊椎动物中并不保守,但在介导交配后对雌性的长期影响中起核心作用。尽管处于有丝分裂后阶段,但附腺中的一种上皮细胞类型——次生细胞,在成年后仍会继续生长。它从内体多囊泡体分泌称为外泌体的微泡,交配后,这些微泡与精子融合。它们似乎也会影响雌性的交配后行为。值得注意的是,人类前列腺上皮细胞也会分泌外泌体,这些外泌体在体外与精子融合以调节其活性。越来越多的研究表明,前列腺和其他癌细胞产生的外泌体在调节肿瘤微环境和转移中发挥着重要作用。在这里,我们综述了各种关于附腺的文献,这些文献突出了果蝇和人类雄性生殖腺之间的功能相似性,以及细胞外囊泡在使精液促进雄性在雌性体内的利益方面的关键作用。我们推测,次生细胞和前列腺上皮细胞利用共同的机制来控制生长、分泌和信号传导,这些机制与前列腺癌和其他癌症相关,并且可以在易于处理的果蝇模型中进行基因剖析。