| Literature DB >> 30572908 |
Maud Gratuze1,2,3, Cheryl E G Leyns1,2,3, David M Holtzman4,5,6.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the leading cause of dementia. The two histopathological markers of AD are amyloid plaques composed of the amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide, and neurofibrillary tangles of aggregated, abnormally hyperphosphorylated tau protein. The majority of AD cases are late-onset, after the age of 65, where a clear cause is still unknown. However, there are likely different multifactorial contributors including age, enviornment, biology and genetics which can increase risk for the disease. Genetic predisposition is considerable, with heritability estimates of 60-80%. Genetic factors such as rare variants of TREM2 (triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-2) strongly increase the risk of developing AD, confirming the role of microglia in AD pathogenesis. In the last 5 years, several studies have dissected the mechanisms by which TREM2, as well as its rare variants affect amyloid and tau pathologies and their consequences in both animal models and in human studies. In this review, we summarize increases in our understanding of the involvement of TREM2 and microglia in AD development that may open new therapeutic strategies targeting the immune system to influence AD pathogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; ApoE; Gliosis; Microglia; Neurodegeneration; TREM2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30572908 PMCID: PMC6302500 DOI: 10.1186/s13024-018-0298-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Fig. 1TREM2 ligands, signaling and functions. Ligands binding to TREM2 induce the association of TREM2 to DAP12 through an electrostatic interaction between a conserved positively-charged lysine in TREM2 (aa186) and a negatively- charged aspartic acid residue in DAP12, generating tyrosine phosphorylation of DAP12 within its immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAMS) by Src family kinases
Summary of the major findings on TREM2 in AD context
| AD context | Major TREM2-AD related findings | Source | Citations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Risk factors | ❖ Rare variants in TREM2 increase LOAD risk by 2- to 4- fold | AD patients | [ |
| Amyloid pathology | ❖ Loss of functional TREM2 decreases microgliosis around plaques | 5xFAD mice | [ |
| ❖ Loss of functional TREM2 decreases plaque compaction | 5xFAD mice | [ | |
| Tau pathology | ❖ TREM2 deletion decreases tau-mediated neurodegeneration | PS19 mice | [ |
| ❖ TREM2 deletion (1) or haploinsuficiency (2) increase tau pathology | hTau mice (1) | [ | |
| ApoE | ❖ ApoE is a TREM2 ligand |
| [ |
| ❖ ApoE-induced switch from homeostatic to neurodegenerative microglia is TREM2-dependent | APPPS1-21 mice | [ |
Fig. 2Schematic summary of the role of TREM2 and its variants in AD. a. Functional TREM2 has been suggested to allow microglia activation (by amyloid and NFTs for example), promote microglia clustering around plaques, amyloid uptake (early stage of the disease) and plaque compaction through binding to plaque-associated ApoE or directly to oligomeric Aβ. b. AD-associated TREM2 variants resulting in TREM2 partial loss-of-function abolished microglia clustering around plaque and phagocytic activity. These changes could be caused by a blockage of microglia in homeostatic stages because of less plaque-associated ApoE or other reasons. The consequences are filamentous plaques associate with increased dystrophic neurites and a possible increase of tau pathology (in early stages)