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Lack of a protective effect of the Tmem106b "protective SNP" in the Grn knockout mouse model for frontotemporal lobar degeneration.

Anne-Sophie CabronUwe BorgmeyerJulia RichterHelga PeiskerKatharina GutbrodPeter DörmannAnja CapellMarkus Damme
Published in: Acta neuropathologica communications (2023)
Genetic variants in TMEM106B are a common risk factor for frontotemporal lobar degeneration and the most important modifier of disease risk in patients with progranulin (GRN) mutations (FTLD-GRN). TMEM106B is encoding a lysosomal transmembrane protein of unknown molecular function. How it mediates its disease-modifying function remains enigmatic. Several TMEM106B single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are significantly associated with disease risk in FTLD-GRN carriers, of which all except one are within intronic sequences of TMEM106B. Of note, the non-coding SNPs are in high linkage disequilibrium with the coding SNP rs3173615 located in exon six of TMEM106B, resulting in a threonine to serine change at amino acid 185 in the minor allele, which is protective in FTLD-GRN carriers. To investigate the functional consequences of this variant in vivo, we generated and characterized a knockin mouse model harboring the Tmem106b T186S variant. We analyzed the effect of this protective variant on FTLD pathology by crossing Tmem106b T186S mice with Grn -/- knockout mice, a model for GRN-mediated FTLD. We did not observe the amelioration of any of the investigated Grn -/- knockout phenotypes, including transcriptomic changes, lipid alterations, or microgliosis in Tmem106b T186S/T186S × Grn -/- mice, indicating that the Tmem106b T186S variant is not protective in the Grn -/- knockout mouse model. These data suggest that effects of the associated SNPs not directly linked to the amino acid exchange in TMEM106B are critical for the modifying effect.
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