Structural hormesis in protein aggregation: A minimal mechanistic model
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Protein aggregation underlies the pathogenesis of many neurodegenerative diseases, and inhibitors are often assumed to elicit monotonic dose-responses. We ask whether simple aggregation pathways can intrinsically generate hormesis -- a biphasic profile with low-dose stimulation and high--dose inhibition. We formulate a minimal mechanistic model in which a single inhibitor interacts sequentially with pathway intermediates. Analysis and simulation show a robust non-monotonic response: low inhibitor doses increase aggregate formation, whereas high doses suppress it. We prove that this profile is structural --arising from chemical network topology rather than tuned kinetic parameters. The mechanism rationalizes pro-aggregating effects at low doses and underscores the need for full-range dose-response evaluation in inhibitor screening.