Terminology Service for NFDI4Health

lobe of prostate

Go to external page http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/UBERON_0001328


A portion of a prostate that forms a lobe. [ https://github.com/obophenotype/uberon/issues/665 ]

Term info

Label

lobe of prostate

Synonyms
  • lobe of prostate gland
  • prostate gland lobe
  • prostatic lobe
database cross reference
contributor

https://github.com/uberon, https://github.com/cmungall, https://github.com/tfhayamizu, https://github.com/RDruzinsky

id

UBERON:0001328

taxon notes

Anatomically, the human prostate gland is located between the base of the bladder and the rectum, and it completely surrounds the proximal urethra (Fig. 1A). It is a single alobular structure with central (CZ), peripheral (PZ) and transitional (TZ) zones. In contrast, the mouse prostate is not merged into one compact anatomical structure. It comprises four paired lobes situated circumferentially around the urethra, immediately caudal to the urinary bladder-namely, anterior (AP), dorsal (DP), lateral (LP), and ventral (VP) prostate (Fig. 1B). Often, the dorsal and the lateral lobes are thought of in combination and referred to as the dorsolateral (DLP) lobe as they share a ductal system. The mouse AP is considered analogous to the human CZ, which is rarely a site of neoplastic transformation in humans. The mouse DLP is considered most similar to the human PZ, which is the zone in which most carcinomas arise (Xue et al. 1997). These analogies, however, are limited as they are based solely on descriptive data and need to be re-evaluated using molecular techniques before the relationship between specific mouse prostate lobes and the human prostate zones is definitively asserted (Abate-Shen & Shen 2000). The mouse VP does not have a human homologue, and the human TZ does not have a murine homologue