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Publication : THY-Tau22 mouse model accumulates more tauopathy at late stage of the disease in response to microglia deactivation through TREM2 deficiency.

First Author  Vautheny A Year  2021
Journal  Neurobiol Dis Volume  155
Pages  105398 PubMed ID  34019997
Mgi Jnum  J:311276 Mgi Id  MGI:6720601
Doi  10.1016/j.nbd.2021.105398 Citation  Vautheny A, et al. (2021) THY-Tau22 mouse model accumulates more tauopathy at late stage of the disease in response to microglia deactivation through TREM2 deficiency. Neurobiol Dis 155:105398
abstractText  The role played by microglia has taken the center of the stage in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Several genome-wide association studies carried out on large cohorts of patients have indeed revealed a large number of genetic susceptibility factors corresponding to genes involved in neuroinflammation and expressed specifically by microglia in the brain. Among these genes TREM2, a cell surface receptor expressed by microglia, arouses strong interest because its R47H variant confers a risk of developing AD comparable to the epsilon4 allele of the APOE gene. Since this discovery, a growing number of studies have therefore examined the role played by TREM2 in the evolution of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles, the two brain lesions characteristic of AD. Many studies report conflicting results, reflecting the complex nature of microglial activation in AD. Here, we investigated the impact of TREM2 deficiency in the THY-Tau22 transgenic line, a well-characterized model of tauopathy. Our study reports an increase in the severity of tauopathy lesions in mice deficient in TREM2 occurring at an advanced stage of the pathology. This exacerbation of pathology was associated with a reduction in microglial activation indicated by typical morphological features and altered expression of specific markers. However, it was not accompanied by any further changes in memory performance. Our longitudinal study confirms that a defect in microglial TREM2 signaling leads to an increase in neuronal tauopathy occurring only at late stages of the disease.
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