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let-418

C. elegans

Protein let-418

What the model saw

Gene: let-418
Organism: Caenorhabditis elegans
Known functions: Protein let-418. ATP binding. ATP hydrolysis activity. ATP-dependent chromatin remodeler activity. DNA binding. RNA polymerase II transcription regulatory region sequence-specific DNA binding. RNA polymerase II-specific DNA-binding transcription factor binding. chromatin binding. histone binding. protein binding.
View unredacted entry
Protein let-418. ATP binding. ATP hydrolysis activity. ATP-dependent chromatin remodeler activity. DNA binding. RNA polymerase II transcription regulatory region sequence-specific DNA binding. RNA polymerase II-specific DNA-binding transcription factor binding. chromatin binding. histone binding. protein binding.

Solver output

Predicted influence
Pro-longevity
Confidence
62%
Mechanism
Epigenetic alterations
Reasoning

let-418 is the C. elegans ortholog of Mi-2/CHD3/CHD4, the catalytic ATPase subunit of the NuRD (Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase) chromatin remodeling complex. Its ATP-dependent chromatin remodeler activity, histone binding, and RNA Pol II transcription factor binding place it as a master regulator of chromatin accessibility and transcriptional repression. In C. elegans, let-418/NuRD functions within the synthetic multivulva (synMuv B) pathway and cooperates with the DRM complex to repress germline and stress-response genes in somatic tissues. Maintenance of proper chromatin compaction and transcriptional fidelity via NuRD activity helps preserve epigenetic homeostasis, which is a key determinant of longevity. Loss of let-418 function leads to derepression of germline gene programs in somatic cells, a hallmark of epigenetic dysregulation associated with shortened lifespan, suggesting the wild-type gene's repressive chromatin remodeling activity is protective and pro-longevity.

Key pathways
NuRD chromatin remodeling complex / ATP-dependent nucleosome repositioningsynMuv B transcriptional repression pathwayRNA Pol II transcription regulation and epigenetic silencing
Longevity influence
Anti-longevity
Lifespan effect
Increase

GenAge curators classify each gene's normal function as promoting (Pro-Longevity) or opposing (Anti-Longevity) longevity, based on synthesis across studies. Loss-of-function effects can vary from this depending on the manipulation.

Advisor judgment

Answer
Incorrect
Mechanism
Incorrect
Reasoning quality
3/5
Failure mode
Confident wrong
Notes

The model predicted pro_longevity but the ground truth is anti_longevity. The model correctly identified let-418 as the Mi-2/NuRD complex ATPase subunit and its role in chromatin remodeling and synMuv B pathway. However, the mechanistic reasoning led to the wrong conclusion. The model argued that loss of let-418 causes derepression of germline genes and epigenetic dysregulation, which would shorten lifespan — implying the wild-type is pro-longevity. In reality, let-418 is anti_longevity, meaning its activity reduces lifespan (or its loss extends lifespan). The actual literature shows that RNAi knockdown of let-418 extends lifespan in C. elegans, likely because NuRD-mediated repression of stress response or longevity genes is relieved. The model's reasoning about germline derepression shortening lifespan was plausible but incorrect in this context — the NuRD complex represses longevity-promoting programs, so its loss extends lifespan. The model had moderate confidence (0.62) but still got the direction wrong.

Raw API responses

solver

{
  "reasoning": "let-418 is the C. elegans ortholog of Mi-2/CHD3/CHD4, the catalytic ATPase subunit of the NuRD (Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase) chromatin remodeling complex. Its ATP-dependent chromatin remodeler activity, histone binding, and RNA Pol II transcription factor binding place it as a master regulator of chromatin accessibility and transcriptional repression. In C. elegans, let-418/NuRD functions within the synthetic multivulva (synMuv B) pathway and cooperates with the DRM complex to repress germline and stress-response genes in somatic tissues. Maintenance of proper chromatin compaction and transcriptional fidelity via NuRD activity helps preserve epigenetic homeostasis, which is a key determinant of longevity. Loss of let-418 function leads to derepression of germline gene programs in somatic cells, a hallmark of epigenetic dysregulation associated with shortened lifespan, suggesting the wild-type gene's repressive chromatin remodeling activity is protective and pro-longevity.",
  "confidence": 0.62,
  "key_pathways": [
    "NuRD chromatin remodeling complex / ATP-dependent nucleosome repositioning",
    "synMuv B transcriptional repression pathway",
    "RNA Pol II transcription regulation and epigenetic silencing"
  ],
  "mechanism_class": "epigenetic_alterations",
  "longevity_influence": "pro_longevity"
}

advisor

{
  "notes": "The model predicted pro_longevity but the ground truth is anti_longevity. The model correctly identified let-418 as the Mi-2/NuRD complex ATPase subunit and its role in chromatin remodeling and synMuv B pathway. However, the mechanistic reasoning led to the wrong conclusion. The model argued that loss of let-418 causes derepression of germline genes and epigenetic dysregulation, which would shorten lifespan — implying the wild-type is pro-longevity. In reality, let-418 is anti_longevity, meaning its activity reduces lifespan (or its loss extends lifespan). The actual literature shows that RNAi knockdown of let-418 extends lifespan in C. elegans, likely because NuRD-mediated repression of stress response or longevity genes is relieved. The model's reasoning about germline derepression shortening lifespan was plausible but incorrect in this context — the NuRD complex represses longevity-promoting programs, so its loss extends lifespan. The model had moderate confidence (0.62) but still got the direction wrong.",
  "failure_mode": "confident_wrong",
  "answer_correct": false,
  "mechanism_correct": false,
  "reasoning_quality": 3,
  "ground_truth_questionable": false
}
let-418 · Caenorhabditis elegans | Aging biology eval