Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

The Amyloid-β Oligomer Hypothesis: Beginning of the Third Decade

Erika N. Cline, Maíra A. Bicca, Kirsten L. Viola, William L. Klein

Journal of Alzheimer s Disease · 2018 · ▲ 854 citations

Abstract

The amyloid-β oligomer (AβO) hypothesis was introduced in 1998. It proposed that the brain damage leading to Alzheimer's disease (AD) was instigated by soluble, ligand-like AβOs. This hypothesis was based on the discovery that fibril-free synthetic preparations of AβOs were potent CNS neurotoxins that rapidly inhibited long-term potentiation and, with time, caused selective nerve cell death (Lambert et al., 1998). The mechanism was attributed to disrupted signaling involving the tyrosine-protein kinase Fyn, mediated by an unknown toxin receptor. Over 4,000 articles concerning AβOs have been published since then, including more than 400 reviews. AβOs have been shown to accumulate in an AD-dependent manner in human and animal model brain tissue and, experimentally, to impair learning and memory and instigate major facets of AD neuropathology, including tau pathology, synapse deterioration and loss, inflammation, and oxidative damage. As reviewed by Hayden and Teplow in 2013, the AβO hypothesis "has all but supplanted the amyloid cascade." Despite the emerging understanding of the role played by AβOs in AD pathogenesis, AβOs have not yet received the clinical attention given to amyloid plaques, which have been at the core of major attempts at therapeutics and diagnostics but are no longer regarded as the most pathogenic form of Aβ. However, if the momentum of AβO research continues, particularly efforts to elucidate key aspects of structure, a clear path to a successful disease modifying therapy can be envisioned. Ensuring that lessons learned from recent, late-stage clinical failures are applied appropriately throughout therapeutic development will further enable the likelihood of a successful therapy in the near-term.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.3233/jad-179941
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-03 MST

Cite this

APA
Cline, E.N., Bicca, M.A., Viola, K.L., &amp; Klein, W.L. (2018). The Amyloid-β Oligomer Hypothesis: Beginning of the Third Decade. <em>Journal of Alzheimer s Disease</em>. https://doi.org/10.3233/jad-179941
Vancouver
Cline EN, Bicca MA, Viola KL, Klein WL. The Amyloid-β Oligomer Hypothesis: Beginning of the Third Decade. Journal of Alzheimer s Disease. 2018. doi:10.3233/jad-179941.
BibTeX
@article{erika2018TheAmy, title = {The Amyloid-β Oligomer Hypothesis: Beginning of the Third Decade}, author = {Erika N. Cline and Maíra A. Bicca and Kirsten L. Viola and William L. Klein}, journal = {Journal of Alzheimer s Disease}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.3233/jad-179941}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings