4.6 Article

Plaque-associated human microglia accumulate lipid droplets in a chimeric model of Alzheimer's disease

Journal

MOLECULAR NEURODEGENERATION
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13024-021-00473-0

Keywords

TREM2; Human microglia; Chimeric Alzheimer mice; Lipid droplets

Categories

Funding

  1. BrightFocus Postdoctoral Fellowship [A2020451F]
  2. NIH [P30CA-062203, 1S10RR025496-01, 1S10OD010794-01, 1S10OD021718-01, AG048099, AG056303, AG061895, AG016573]

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The study found that lipid droplet accumulation occurs in human DAM xMGs in Alzheimer's disease, but is reduced in TREM2-R47H DAM xMGs, as it is caused by TREM2-mediated changes in plaque proximity and reactivity.
Background Disease-associated microglia (DAMs), that surround beta-amyloid plaques, represent a transcriptionally-distinct microglial profile in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Activation of DAMs is dependent on triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) in mouse models and the AD TREM2-R47H risk variant reduces microglial activation and plaque association in human carriers. Interestingly, TREM2 has also been identified as a microglial lipid-sensor, and recent data indicates lipid droplet accumulation in aged microglia, that is in turn associated with a dysfunctional proinflammatory phenotype. However, whether lipid droplets (LDs) are present in human microglia in AD and how the R47H mutation affects this remains unknown. Methods To determine the impact of the TREM2 R47H mutation on human microglial function in vivo, we transplanted wild-type and isogenic TREM2-R47H iPSC-derived microglial progenitors into our recently developed chimeric Alzheimer mouse model. At 7 months of age scRNA-seq and histological analyses were performed. Results Here we report that the transcriptome of human wild-type TREM2 and isogenic TREM2-R47H DAM xenografted microglia (xMGs), isolated from chimeric AD mice, closely resembles that of human atherosclerotic foam cells. In addition, much like foam cells, plaque-bound xMGs are highly enriched in lipid droplets. Somewhat surprisingly and in contrast to a recent in vitro study, TREM2-R47H mutant xMGs exhibit an overall reduction in the accumulation of lipid droplets in vivo. Notably, TREM2-R47H xMGs also show overall reduced reactivity to plaques, including diminished plaque-proximity, reduced CD9 expression, and lower secretion of plaque-associated APOE. Conclusions Altogether, these results indicate lipid droplet accumulation occurs in human DAM xMGs in AD, but is reduced in TREM2-R47H DAM xMGs, as it occurs secondary to TREM2-mediated changes in plaque proximity and reactivity.

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