Macrophages exhibit marked phenotypic heterogeneity within and across disease states, with lipid metabolic reprogramming contributing to macrophage activation and heterogeneity. Chronic inflammation has been observed in human benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) tissues, however macrophage activation states and their contributions to this hyperplastic disease have not been defined. We postulated that a shift in macrophage phenotypes with increasing prostate size could involve metabolic alterations resulting in prostatic epithelial or stromal hyperplasia.
Single-cell RNA-seq of CD45+ transition zone leukocytes from 10 large (>90 grams) and 10 small (<40 grams) human prostates was conducted. Macrophage subpopulations were defined using marker genes and evaluated by flow cytometry.
BPH macrophages do not distinctly categorize into M1 and M2 phenotypes. Instead, macrophages with neither polarization signature preferentially accumulate in large versus small prostates. Specifically, macrophage subpopulations with altered lipid metabolism pathways, demarcated by TREM2 and MARCO expression, accumulate with increased prostate volume. TREM2 high and MARCO high macrophage abundance positively correlates with patient body mass index and urinary symptom scores. TREM2high macrophages have a statistically significant increase in neutral lipid compared to TREM2low macrophages from BPH tissues. Lipid-rich macrophages were observed to localize within the stroma in BPH tissues. In vitro studies indicate that lipid-loaded macrophages increase prostate epithelial and stromal cell proliferation compared to control macrophages.
These data define two new BPH immune subpopulations, TREM2high and MARCOhigh macrophages, and suggest that lipid-rich macrophages may exacerbate lower urinary tract symptoms in patients with large prostates. Further investigation is needed to evaluate the therapeutic benefit of targeting these cells in BPH.
Frontiers in immunology. 2025 Jan 10*** epublish ***
Nadia Atallah Lanman, Era Meco, Philip Fitchev, Andree K Kolliegbo, Meaghan M Broman, Yana Filipovich, Harish Kothandaraman, Gregory M Cresswell, Pooja Talaty, Malgorzata Antoniak, Svetlana Brumer, Alexander P Glaser, Andrew M Higgins, Brian T Helfand, Omar E Franco, Chi-Hsiung Wang, Susan E Crawford, Timothy L Ratliff, Simon W Hayward, Renee E Vickman
Department of Comparative Pathobiology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States., Division of Urology, Department of Surgery, Endeavor Health (formerly NorthShore University HealthSystem), Evanston, IL, United States., Purdue University Institute for Cancer Research, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States., Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Feist-Weiller Cancer Center, Louisiana State University Shreveport, Shreveport, LA, United States., Biostatistics and Research Informatics, Endeavor Health, Evanston, IL, United States.