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Publication : TREM2 Maintains Microglial Metabolic Fitness in Alzheimer's Disease.

First Author  Ulland TK Year  2017
Journal  Cell Volume  170
Issue  4 Pages  649-663.e13
PubMed ID  28802038 Mgi Jnum  J:242830
Mgi Id  MGI:5906931 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2017.07.023
Citation  Ulland TK, et al. (2017) TREM2 Maintains Microglial Metabolic Fitness in Alzheimer's Disease. Cell 170(4):649-663.e13
abstractText  Elevated risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with hypomorphic variants of TREM2, a surface receptor required for microglial responses to neurodegeneration, including proliferation, survival, clustering, and phagocytosis. How TREM2 promotes such diverse responses is unknown. Here, we find that microglia in AD patients carrying TREM2 risk variants and TREM2-deficient mice with AD-like pathology have abundant autophagic vesicles, as do TREM2-deficient macrophages under growth-factor limitation or endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Combined metabolomics and RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) linked this anomalous autophagy to defective mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling, which affects ATP levels and biosynthetic pathways. Metabolic derailment and autophagy were offset in vitro through Dectin-1, a receptor that elicits TREM2-like intracellular signals, and cyclocreatine, a creatine analog that can supply ATP. Dietary cyclocreatine tempered autophagy, restored microglial clustering around plaques, and decreased plaque-adjacent neuronal dystrophy in TREM2-deficient mice with amyloid-beta pathology. Thus, TREM2 enables microglial responses during AD by sustaining cellular energetic and biosynthetic metabolism.
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