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Prion-Like Spreading in Neurodegenerative Diseases

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mechanism2347 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Prion-Like Spreading in Neurodegenerative Diseases

Overview

Prion-like propagation represents one of the most transformative concepts in neurodegenerative disease research, explaining how protein pathology spreads throughout the brain in a predictable pattern. Originally discovered in prion diseases like Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, the principle of template-guided protein misfolding and cell-to-cell transmission has now been extended to Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, ALS, Huntington's disease, and frontotemporal dementia[@prionlike2021].

This mechanism explains the characteristic spreading patterns observed in postmortem brain tissue, where pathology advances along anatomically connected neural networks rather than appearing randomly throughout the brain. The recognition that multiple neurodegenerative diseases share this propagation mechanism has fundamentally changed our understanding of disease progression and opened new therapeutic avenues[@jucker2018].

Common Principles of Prion-Like Propagation

Template-Guided Misfolding

All prion-like proteins share the ability to convert normal, native proteins into their misfolded conformations through a process termed "templated nucleation"[@soto2011]. The misfolded protein serves as a template that catalyzes the conformational conversion of normal proteins:

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