| Literature DB >> 28768545 |
Taylor R Jay1, Victoria E von Saucken1,2, Gary E Landreth3,4.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Frontotemporal dementia; Genetic risk factors; Genetics; Inflammation; Microglia; Neurodegeneration; Parkinson’s disease; Triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28768545 PMCID: PMC5541421 DOI: 10.1186/s13024-017-0197-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Fig. 1Diverse TREM2 variants are associated with NDDs. Genetic variants in the TREM2 gene (shown above) result in diverse changes in the protein structure (shown below). These variants occur in almost every exon (black boxes) and impact known protein motifs (sequences highlighted in blue) and flank many sites of known protein modifications (amino acid number and type of modification detailed inside black boxes). TREM2 variants have been found to be significantly associated with many NDDs, including AD (variants shown in yellow), FTD or FTLD (pink), PD (purple) and PLOSL (red). The table shows genetic variants that have been found to be significantly associated with disease risk, with supporting references shown in dark green and references that provide strong counterevidence shown in red. References shown in light green did find a significant association between the TREM2 variant and disease risk, but only in one or multiple populations they examined or only after inclusion of previously published literature into metastudy analyses. While these variants have been significantly associated with disease risk, many more studies find suggestive but not significant associations between additional TREM2 variants and NDD risk which are not represented here [5, 6, 16, 18, 26, 28, 30, 31, 35–37, 39–42, 45–47, 49–52, 54, 55, 57, 58, 60, 64, 65, 67, 70, 82, 83, 88, 131, 323–325]
Fig. 2TREM2 can be present as a full-length protein (shown at top) or as a soluble product. This can occur through proteolytic cleavage by ADAM10 followed by γ-secretase to produce soluble TREM2 (sTREM2), a C-terminal fragment (CTF) and an intracellular domain (ICD). TREM2 can also be alternatively spliced to produce soluble isoforms. One alternative transcript has been validated in mice, while two have been validated in humans and four others are predicted to occur [51, 132, 133, 161, 225, 228, 230, 232]
Fig. 3TREM2 is expressed in many immune cells, and is localized to microglia in the CNS. TREM2 expression has been assessed in a variety of human and mouse cell types. These data represent TREM2 expression in these cells under homeostatic conditions, though, as discussed in the next section, TREM2 expression can change in the contexts of inflammation or pathology. References shown in green are supportive of TREM2 expression in the cell type listed while those in red did not detect TREM2 expression using the listed method of detection. References in yellow provide evidence of expression, but at low levels or in a small percentage of cells assayed. The graph represents the cell types in which TREM2 expression has been examined at a size relative to the number of studies and methods used to detect TREM2 expression in that cell type. They are graphed along the y-axis according to the percentage of these findings which support TREM2 expression on these cells [11, 19, 25, 26, 85, 101, 116, 126, 128, 130, 134–137, 139–143, 145, 150–160, 162, 164, 165, 216, 219, 200]
Fig. 4TREM2 signaling and function. TREM2 has been proposed to bind to a variety of different ligands, categorized here by lipids, lipoproteins and ligands associated with damage- or pathogen-related molecular patterns. These ligands bind to the TREM2 receptor. Following ligand binding, TREM2 can associate with DAP12 homodimers or DAP12/DAP10 heterodimers to mediate downstream signaling. This signaling requires phosphorylation of the adaptor, following which activating (shown on left in green) or inhibitory (shown on right in red) signaling components can bind. These activating components have been shown to initiate different downstream pathways that lead to cell proliferation and differentiation, survival, phagocytosis, chemotaxis and inflammation. While many other signaling components are thought to play a role downstream of TREM2 activation, only those validated as part of the signaling pathway responsible for the listed functions have been included here. Association with inhibitory components is thought to prevent activation of these downstream pathways. Lipids: PE [254, 96], PS [96, 144, 196, 222, 254], PA [96, 222, 254], PG [254, 222, 96], PC [144, 196, 222, 96, 254], PI [196, 222, 96], CL [96, 254, 222], SM [196, 222, 96, 254], LA [254, 222], SA [144, 196, 222, 96], Apo-/lipoproteins: ApoE [95, 96, 94], ApoJ [94], ApoA-1 [94, 96], ApoA-II [94, 96], LDL, HDL [94, 144, 93], PAMP/DAMPs: [244, 245], (−) bacterial products (LPS, LTA) [244], Nucleic Acids [160], Heat Shock protien 60 [249], Apoptotic cells [95, 153, 160, 96, 222], Macropahages [252], Astrocytoma cells [244]
Characteristics of experimental design for studies that examined sTREM2 in CSF and plasma
| Study | Sample Type | Method of sTREM2 Detection | Main Finding ( | sTREM2 (pg/ml), mean ± sd or median(IQR) | Study Cohort | Controls (CTR) | Diagnostic Parameters | Age (yrs) | Gender | ApoE ε4+ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Criteria | Cognitive Testing | Other | ||||||||||
| Gispert et al. (2016) [ | CSF | ELISA | ↑ |
| PreAD ( | Cognitively normal subjects defined by MMSE score > 27, CDR = 0, and negative AD CSF profilea ( | NIA-AA for AD and MCI due to AD groups | MMSE and CDR; | MRI; Positive AD CSF profile: Aβ42 (<500 pg/ml), t-tau (>450 pg/ml), and p-tau (>75 pg/ml) | CTR: | CTR: 63% | CTR: 15% |
| Suárez-Calvet et al. (2016) [ | CSF | ELISA | ↑ sTREM2 [CTR-MCI (0.002); AD-MCI (0.013); PreAD-MCI (0.062)] |
| PreAD ( | Asymptomatic cognitively normal subjects with a negative AD CSF profilea, determined across five centers ( | NIA-AA for each group | NR | Positive AD CSF profilea with cut-off values unique to each center (refer to [ | CTR: | CTR: 59% | CTR: 21% |
| Suárez-Calvet et al. (2016) [ | CSF | ELISA | ↑ sTREM2 [NC-MC (0.004)] | NC: | Cases with ADAD ( | Noncarriers ( | Presence of ADAD mutation ( | MMSE and CDR | AD CSF profile examined | NC: | NC: 54% | NC: 34% |
| ↑ sTREM2 [MC with CDR = 0.5 (0.006); MC with CDR = 1 (0.044)] | No. of Subjects per CDR: | No. of Subjects per CDR: | ||||||||||
| Heslegrave et al. (2016) [ | CSF | Novel reaction monitoring assay with UPLC/TQ-S MS | ↑ sTREM2 | CTR: 195.6 (131.0–240.7) |
| Cognitively normal with negative AD CSF profilea ( | Revised IWG2 | MMSE | Positive AD CSF profilea (Aβ42 < 550 pg/ml, t-tau >375 pg/ml, p-tau >52 pg/ml) | CTR: | CTR: 45% | CTR: 33% |
| ↑ sTREM2 | CTR: 171 (153.5–241.5) |
| Cognitively normal subjects ( | NIA-AA for AD or MCI due to AD | MMSE | MRI or CT; | CTR: | CTR: 56% | CTR: 31% | |||
| Kleinberger et al. (2014) [ | CSF | ELISA | ↓ sTREM2 |
| AD ( | Cognitively normal with negative AD CSF profilea (CSF: | NINCDS-ADRDA for probable AD | NR | Positive AD CSF profilea defined by the Mattsson et al. equation: [ | CTR: | CTR: 63% | NR |
| Plasma | ↔ sTREM2 |
| AD ( | CTR: | CTR: 64% | NR | ||||||
| Henjum et al. (2016) [ | CSF | ELISA | ↔ sTREM2 | CTR: 4400 (3000–5700) |
| Cognitively normal subjects ( | DSM-IIIR for dementia; NINCDS-ADRDA for AD | MMSE | MRI or CT | CTR: | CTR: 50% | CTR: 0% |
| ↔ sTREM2 | CTR: 3200 (2800–5000) |
| Cognitively normal with normal Aβ42 levels (>550 pg/ml) ( | NIA-AA for AD or MCI due to AD | MMSE | MRI or CT; | CTR: | CTR: 68% | CTR: 4% | |||
| Piccio et al. (2016) [ | CSF | ELISA | ↑ sTREM2 [CTR-AD (0.015)] | CTR: 1028 (244–2570) | Those with mainly mild AD, non- | Cognitively normal subjects (CDR 0) and negative for AD CSF profilea (CSF: | NINCDS-ADRDA for probable AD | CDR | NR | CTR: | CTR: 53% | CTR: 48% |
| Plasma | ↔ sTREM2 | CTR: 976 (65–2477) | NR | NR | NR | |||||||
Abbreviations: AD Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment [313], CSF cerebrospinal fluid, Aβ42 amyloid-β 1–42, p-tau Phosphorylated tau, t-tau total tau, IS internal standard, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay [228], UPLC/TQ-S MS Tandem Quadrupole Mass Spectrometry, NC noncarriers, MC mutation carriers, ADAD autosomal dominant AD, NR not reported, PSEN presenilin, APP amyloid precursor protein, PreAD Preclinical AD, DSM Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, NIA-AA National Institute on Aging--Alzheimer’s Association, NINCDS-ADRDA National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Association, IWG2 International Working Group, CDR clinical dementia rating, MMSE mini-mental state examination, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network [268]
aThe ‘AD CSF profile’ consists of high t-tau and p-tau, and low Aβ42 levels in CSF; cut-off values are specified for each study. Under main finding, the results are presented as significantly elevated (↑), significantly reduced (↓), or non-significant differences (↔) in sTREM2