International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

<i>TREML2</i> Gene Expression and Its Missense Variant rs3747742 Associate with White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Alzheimer’s Disease-Related Brain Atrophy in the General Population

  • Annemarie Luise Kühn,
  • Stefan Frenzel,
  • Alexander Teumer,
  • Katharina Wittfeld,
  • Linda Garvert,
  • Antoine Weihs,
  • Georg Homuth,
  • Holger Prokisch,
  • Robin Bülow,
  • Matthias Nauck,
  • Uwe Völker,
  • Henry Völzke,
  • Hans Jörgen Grabe,
  • Sandra Van der Auwera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232213764
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 22
p. 13764

Abstract

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Although the common pathology of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and white matter hyperintensities (WMH) is disputed, the gene TREML2 has been implicated in both conditions: its whole-blood gene expression was associated with WMH volume and its missense variant rs3747742 with AD risk. We re-examined those associations within one comprehensive dataset of the general population, additionally searched for cross-relations and illuminated the role of the apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 status in the associations. For our linear regression and linear mixed effect models, we used 1949 participants from the Study of Health in Pomerania (Germany). AD was assessed using a continuous pre-symptomatic MRI-based score evaluating a participant’s AD-related brain atrophy. In our study, increased whole-blood TREML2 gene expression was significantly associated with reduced WMH volume but not with the AD score. Conversely, rs3747742-C was significantly associated with a reduced AD score but not with WMH volume. The APOE status did not influence the associations. In sum, TREML2 robustly associated with WMH volume and AD-related brain atrophy on different molecular levels. Our results thus underpin TREML2’s role in neurodegeneration, might point to its involvement in AD and WMH via different biological mechanisms, and highlight TREML2 as a worthwhile target for disentangling the two pathologies.

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