Schematic representation of dissociation of epithelial and neuroendocrine lineages in early prostatic tumorigenesis in TRAMP mice in our cohort. In the neuroendocrine carcinoma pathway (B1 and B2) a pluripotent stem cell of the normal prostate (A) is transformed by SV40 Tag expression and starts to proliferate. Initially these proliferative foci maintain a transitional epithelial/NE phenotype co-expressing E-cadherin, synaptophysin, and both Foxa1 and Foxa2 (orange cells with solid nuclei). These bipotential cells continue to proliferate, undergo full NE differentiation with loss of E-cadherin, and then progress to an overt NE carcinoma. NE carcinomas quickly invade the surrounding stroma and have the potential to metastasize. NE carcinomas maintain Foxa1 expression reminiscent of this bipotential stem cell origin. In the atypical hyperplasia of Tag pathway (C1 and C2), luminal cells of the normal prostate (A) are transformed by SV40 Tag expression (yellow cells with solid nuclei), proliferate, and form focal areas of hyperplasia. These foci expand and soon involve the entire glandular lumen. These lesions become large, complex, and dysplastic, but they do not invade the surrounding stroma and do not metastasize. Epithelial cells in these lesions continue to express E-cadherin, Foxa1, and SV40 Tag.