📖
wiki page

Protein Oligomerization Toxicity Pathway in Neurodegeneration

📖 Wiki Page
mechanism1557 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Protein Oligomerization Toxicity Pathway in Neurodegeneration

Introduction

Protein Oligomerization Toxicity Pathway In Neurodegeneration is an important component in the neurobiology of neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides detailed information about its structure, function, and role in disease processes.

Overview

Protein oligomerization represents a critical pathological mechanism in neurodegenerative diseases, where soluble toxic oligomers have emerged as the primary neurotoxic species rather than insoluble fibrils. This pathway document explores the molecular mechanisms of protein oligomerization, its role in neurodegeneration, and therapeutic strategies targeting oligomeric species. [@ding2025]

The oligomerization process involves the misfolding and aggregation of native proteins into soluble oligomeric intermediates that subsequently form insoluble fibrillar aggregates. Unlike the historical focus on amyloid fibrils, contemporary research demonstrates that soluble oligomers are the most pathogenic species, causing synaptic dysfunction, neuronal death, and spreading pathology throughout the brain. [@li2025]

Oligomer vs. Fibril: The Toxicity Paradigm Shift

Historical Perspective

Early amyloid research focused on fibrillar deposits as the primary toxic entity. The "amyloid cascade hypothesis" originally proposed that [amyloid-beta](/proteins/amyloid-beta) (Aβ) fibrils and plaques drive Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis. However, mounting evidence has shifted attention toward soluble oligomers as the actual toxic species. [@chen2025]

...
📖 View canonical wiki page →
Related Entities
mechanisms-protein-oligomerization-toxicity-pathway
View on SciDEX ↗