Does Soluble TREM2 Protect Against Alzheimer's Disease?
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Authors
Brown, Guy C
St George-Hyslop, Peter
Publication Date
2021Journal Title
Front Aging Neurosci
ISSN
1663-4365
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Brown, G. C., & St George-Hyslop, P. (2021). Does Soluble TREM2 Protect Against Alzheimer's Disease?. Front Aging Neurosci https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2021.834697
Abstract
Triggering Receptor Expressed in Myeloid Cells 2 (TREM2) is a pattern recognition receptor on myeloid cells, and is upregulated on microglia surrounding amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Rare, heterozygous mutations in TREM2 (e.g., R47H) increase AD risk several fold. TREM2 can be cleaved at the plasma membrane by metalloproteases to release the ectodomain as soluble TREM2 (sTREM2). Wild-type sTREM2 binds oligomeric amyloid beta (Aβ) and acts as an extracellular chaperone, blocking and reversing Aβ oligomerization and fibrillization, and preventing Aβ-induced neuronal loss in vitro. Whereas, R47H sTREM2 increases Aβ fibrillization and neurotoxicity. AD brains expressing R47H TREM2 have more fibrous plaques with more neuritic pathology around these plaques, consistent with R47H sTREM2 promoting Aβ fibrillization relative to WT sTREM2. Brain expression or injection of wild-type sTREM2 reduces pathology in amyloid models of AD in mice, indicating that wild-type sTREM2 is protective against amyloid pathology. Levels of sTREM2 in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fall prior to AD, rise in early AD, and fall again in late AD. People with higher sTREM2 levels in CSF progress more slowly into and through AD than do people with lower sTREM2 levels, suggesting that sTREM2 protects against AD. However, some of these experiments can be interpreted as full-length TREM2 protecting rather than sTREM2, and to distinguish between these two possibilities, we need more experiments testing whether sTREM2 itself protects in AD and AD models, and at what stage of disease. If sTREM2 is protective, then treatments could be designed to elevate sTREM2 in AD.
Keywords
Alzheimer's disease, TREM2, amyloid beta, microglia, neurodegeneration, neuroinflammation, neuroprotection, sTREM2
Sponsorship
EU IMI2
Funder references
Wellcome Trust (084645/Z/08/Z)
Medical Research Council (MR/L010593/1)
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Research Infrastructures (RI) (115976)
Wellcome Trust (203249/Z/16/Z)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2021.834697
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331964
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