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Wild-type sTREM2 blocks Aβ aggregation and neurotoxicity, while the Alzheimer’s R47H mutant does the opposite

Authors :
Lisa-Maria Needham
Masahiro Enomoto
Yalun Zhang
Arturas Bruzas
Roger B. Dodd
Kanayo Satoh
David Klenerman
Fusheng Chen
Paul E. Fraser
Jean Sevalle
Steven F. Lee
Seema Qamar
Peter St George-Hyslop
Jochen Walter
David H. Allendorf
James Henderson
Jennifer K. Griffin
Guy C. Brown
Miguel Angel Burguillos
Suman De
Ye Zhou
Anna Vilalta
Mar Puigdellívol
Patrick Flagmeier
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Missense mutations (e.g. R47H) of the microglial receptor TREM2 increase risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and the soluble ectodomain of wild-type TREM2 (sTREM2) appears to protect in vivo, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. We show that Aβ oligomers bind to TREM2, inducing shedding of sTREM2. Wild-type sTREM2 inhibits Aβ oligomerization, fibrillization and neurotoxicity, and disaggregates preformed Aβ oligomers and protofibrils. In contrast, the R47H AD-risk variant of sTREM2 is less able to bind and disaggregate oligomeric Aβ, but rather promotes Aβ protofibril formation and neurotoxicity. Thus, in addition to mediating phagocytosis, wild-type TREM2 may protect against amyloid pathology by Aβ-induced release of sTREM2 that blocks Aβ aggregation and neurotoxicity; while R47H sTREM2 promotes Aβ aggregation into neurotoxic forms, which may explain why the R47H variant gene increases AD risk several fold.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b68e4a017607189fee2054e1aa314424