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rpl-17

C. elegans

Large ribosomal subunit protein uL22

What the model saw

Gene: rpl-17
Organism: Caenorhabditis elegans
Known functions: Large ribosomal subunit protein uL22. structural constituent of ribosome.
View unredacted entry
Large ribosomal subunit protein uL22. structural constituent of ribosome.

Solver output

Predicted influence
Pro-longevity
Confidence
72%
Mechanism
Deregulated nutrient sensing
Reasoning

rpl-17 encodes the large ribosomal subunit protein uL22, a structural component of the 60S ribosomal subunit. In C. elegans, partial loss-of-function of large ribosomal subunit proteins (including multiple RPL genes) is well-documented to extend lifespan, acting through reduced translational capacity that mimics dietary restriction and downregulates TOR/TORC1 signaling. Reduced ribosome activity lowers global protein synthesis rates, which feeds back into nutrient-sensing pathways (TOR, IIS) to promote longevity. Thus, the normal function of rpl-17 — supporting full ribosomal translation — opposes the longevity benefit seen when this pathway is attenuated. However, the gene's normal function (promoting translation) is anti-longevity in this context, as its reduction extends lifespan via decreased TOR-driven protein synthesis.

Key pathways
TOR/TORC1 nutrient sensingribosomal translation regulationdietary restriction mimicry
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
Correct
Reasoning quality
3/5
Failure mode
Right answer, wrong reasoning
Notes

The model correctly identifies the mechanism — that rpl-17 encodes a large ribosomal subunit protein, and that reduction of ribosomal proteins in C. elegans extends lifespan via reduced translation/TOR signaling. However, the model contradicts itself and ultimately outputs the wrong answer. The model's reasoning explicitly states "the gene's normal function (promoting translation) is anti-longevity," which aligns with the ground truth (anti_longevity). But the final prediction field says "pro_longevity," which is incorrect. The model seems confused about the directionality convention: it correctly understands that loss of rpl-17 extends lifespan (making the gene anti-longevity in its normal function), but then labels it "pro_longevity" — possibly confusing the effect of the knockdown with the gene's classification. The mechanistic reasoning is largely correct, but the final answer label is wrong.

Raw API responses

solver

{
  "reasoning": "rpl-17 encodes the large ribosomal subunit protein uL22, a structural component of the 60S ribosomal subunit. In C. elegans, partial loss-of-function of large ribosomal subunit proteins (including multiple RPL genes) is well-documented to extend lifespan, acting through reduced translational capacity that mimics dietary restriction and downregulates TOR/TORC1 signaling. Reduced ribosome activity lowers global protein synthesis rates, which feeds back into nutrient-sensing pathways (TOR, IIS) to promote longevity. Thus, the normal function of rpl-17 — supporting full ribosomal translation — opposes the longevity benefit seen when this pathway is attenuated. However, the gene's normal function (promoting translation) is anti-longevity in this context, as its reduction extends lifespan via decreased TOR-driven protein synthesis.",
  "confidence": 0.72,
  "key_pathways": [
    "TOR/TORC1 nutrient sensing",
    "ribosomal translation regulation",
    "dietary restriction mimicry"
  ],
  "mechanism_class": "deregulated_nutrient_sensing",
  "longevity_influence": "pro_longevity"
}

advisor

{
  "notes": "The model correctly identifies the mechanism — that rpl-17 encodes a large ribosomal subunit protein, and that reduction of ribosomal proteins in C. elegans extends lifespan via reduced translation/TOR signaling. However, the model contradicts itself and ultimately outputs the wrong answer. The model's reasoning explicitly states \"the gene's normal function (promoting translation) is anti-longevity,\" which aligns with the ground truth (anti_longevity). But the final prediction field says \"pro_longevity,\" which is incorrect. The model seems confused about the directionality convention: it correctly understands that loss of rpl-17 extends lifespan (making the gene anti-longevity in its normal function), but then labels it \"pro_longevity\" — possibly confusing the effect of the knockdown with the gene's classification. The mechanistic reasoning is largely correct, but the final answer label is wrong.",
  "failure_mode": "right_answer_wrong_reasoning",
  "answer_correct": false,
  "mechanism_correct": true,
  "reasoning_quality": 3,
  "ground_truth_questionable": false
}