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Published December 3, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

A locked immunometabolic switch underlies TREM2 R47H loss of function in human iPSC-derived microglia

Description

Loss-of-function genetic variants of triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) are linked with an enhanced risk of developing dementias. Microglia, the resident immune cell of the brain, express TREM2, and microglial responses are implicated in dementia pathways. In a normal surveillance state, microglia use oxidative phosphorylation for their energy supply, but rely on the ability to undergo a metabolic switch to glycolysis to allow them to perform rapid plastic responses. We investigated the role of TREM2 on the microglial metabolic function in human patient iPSC-derived microglia expressing loss of function variants in TREM2. We show that these TREM2 variant iPSC-microglia, including the Alzheimer's disease R47H risk variant, exhibit significant metabolic deficits including a reduced mitochondrial respiratory capacity and an inability to perform a glycolytic immunometabolic switch. We determined that dysregulated PPARγ/p38MAPK signaling underlies the observed phenotypic deficits in TREM2 variants and that activation of these pathways can ameliorate the metabolic deficit in these cells and consequently rescue critical microglial cellular function such as β-Amyloid phagocytosis. These findings have ramifications for microglial focussed-treatments in AD.

Files

2019 Piers - A locked immunometabolic switch underlies TREM2 R47H loss of function in human iPSC‐derived microglia.pdf

Additional details

Funding

PHAGO – Inflammation and AD: modulating microglia function focussing on TREM2 and CD33 - Sofia ref.: 115976 115976
European Commission