Small Molecule Agonists of TREM2 Reprogram Microglia and Protect Synapses in Human Alzheimer's Models.
Triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-2 (TREM2) is a key immune receptor in the central nervous system that regulates microglial phagocytosis, survival, and neuroinflammatory responses. TRME2 variants have been established as genetic risk factors for Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the therapeutic development of TREM2 modulators has been limited to antibody-based approaches that face limitations in blood-brain barrier penetration and manufacturing scalability. Furthermore, there are no FDA approved TREM2 therapeutics available to date marking an unmet therapeutic gap. Herein, we report the identification of the first TREM2 small molecule submicromolar binders as a result of optimizing compound <b>4a</b> to yield <b>S9</b> with TREM2 binding affinity of 0.95 µM. <b>S9</b> demonstrated robust TREM2 agonism in cellular assays where it induced proximal Syk phosphorylation, activated downstream NFAT transcriptional signaling, enhanced APOE internalization and microglial phagocytic capacity. Pharmacokinetic profiling of the optimized hits revealed <b>S9</b> to exhibit improved drug-likeness compared to <b>4a</b> with 7-fold enhanced aqueous solubility, superior metabolic stability, reduced intrinsic clearance and a 9-fold improved hERG safety margin. Functional validation in human iPSC-derived microglia confirmed that <b>S9</b> suppresses amyloid-beta (Aβ)-induced IL-1β secretion through a TREM2-dependent mechanism. In human neuron-microglia co-culture models exposed to amyloid stress, <b>S9</b> treatment preserved synaptic integrity as measured by PSD95 expression that indicates promising neuroprotective activity. Together, these findings establish <b>S9</b> as a first-TREM2 submicromolar small molecule TREM2 agonist which is orally bioavailable with favorable pharmacokinetic properties and promising therapeutic potential for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.