Neurobiology of Disease (Oct 2023)

Alzheimer risk-increasing TREM2 variant causes aberrant cortical synapse density and promotes network hyperexcitability in mouse models

  • Melanie Das,
  • Wenjie Mao,
  • Yuliya Voskobiynyk,
  • Deanna Necula,
  • Irene Lew,
  • Cathrine Petersen,
  • Allie Zahn,
  • Gui-Qiu Yu,
  • Xinxing Yu,
  • Nicholas Smith,
  • Faten A. Sayed,
  • Li Gan,
  • Jeanne T. Paz,
  • Lennart Mucke

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 186
p. 106263

Abstract

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The R47H variant of triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) increases the risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD). To investigate potential mechanisms, we analyzed knockin mice expressing human TREM2-R47H from one mutant mouse Trem2 allele. TREM2-R47H mice showed increased seizure activity in response to an acute excitotoxin challenge, compared to wildtype controls or knockin mice expressing the common variant of human TREM2. TREM2-R47H also increased spontaneous thalamocortical epileptiform activity in App knockin mice expressing amyloid precursor proteins bearing autosomal dominant AD mutations and a humanized amyloid-β sequence. In mice with or without such App modifications, TREM2-R47H increased the density of putative synapses in cortical regions without amyloid plaques. TREM2-R47H did not affect synaptic density in hippocampal regions with or without plaques. We conclude that TREM2-R47H increases AD-related network hyperexcitability and that it may do so, at least in part, by causing an imbalance in synaptic densities across brain regions.

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