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Mcm2

M. musculus

minichromosome maintenance complex component 2

What the model saw

Gene: Mcm2
Organism: Mus musculus
Known functions: minichromosome maintenance complex component 2. DNA replication licensing factor MCM2. 3'-5' DNA helicase activity. ATP binding. ATP hydrolysis activity. DNA binding. DNA helicase activity. DNA replication origin binding. enzyme binding. histone binding. protein binding. single-stranded DNA binding. single-stranded DNA helicase activity.
View unredacted entry
minichromosome maintenance complex component 2. DNA replication licensing factor MCM2. 3'-5' DNA helicase activity. ATP binding. ATP hydrolysis activity. DNA binding. DNA helicase activity. DNA replication origin binding. enzyme binding. histone binding. protein binding. single-stranded DNA binding. single-stranded DNA helicase activity.

Solver output

Predicted influence
Pro-longevity
Confidence
72%
Mechanism
Genomic instability
Reasoning

MCM2 is a core subunit of the MCM2-7 replicative helicase complex, which is essential for DNA replication licensing — the process that ensures each origin of replication fires exactly once per cell cycle. Its 3'-5' DNA helicase and ATPase activities are required for unwinding duplex DNA at replication forks, preventing under-replication and replication stress. Loss or hypomorphic function of MCM2 leads to replication fork stalling, DNA double-strand breaks, and accumulation of genomic instability, a primary hallmark of aging. Additionally, MCM2's histone-binding activity is critical for parental histone recycling during replication, helping to maintain epigenetic information — disruption of which accelerates aging phenotypes. Adequate MCM2 function therefore suppresses genomic instability and preserves epigenetic integrity, both of which are pro-longevity effects.

Key pathways
DNA replication licensing (MCM2-7 helicase complex)Replication fork protection and genomic stabilityParental histone recycling and epigenetic maintenance
Longevity influence
Pro-longevity
Lifespan effect
Decrease

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
Correct
Mechanism
Correct
Reasoning quality
5/5
Failure mode
Correct
Notes

The model correctly predicted pro_longevity for Mcm2 in Mus musculus with high confidence (0.72). The mechanistic reasoning is excellent and well-grounded: it correctly identifies MCM2's role in DNA replication licensing via the MCM2-7 helicase complex, explains how loss of function leads to genomic instability (a hallmark of aging), and notably includes the histone-binding/parental histone recycling function which is a more nuanced and accurate mechanistic point relevant to epigenetic maintenance during aging. The reasoning about replication fork protection and genomic stability suppression as pro-longevity mechanisms is sound and consistent with published literature on MCM2 hypomorphic mouse models showing accelerated aging phenotypes.

Raw API responses

solver

{
  "reasoning": "MCM2 is a core subunit of the MCM2-7 replicative helicase complex, which is essential for DNA replication licensing — the process that ensures each origin of replication fires exactly once per cell cycle. Its 3'-5' DNA helicase and ATPase activities are required for unwinding duplex DNA at replication forks, preventing under-replication and replication stress. Loss or hypomorphic function of MCM2 leads to replication fork stalling, DNA double-strand breaks, and accumulation of genomic instability, a primary hallmark of aging. Additionally, MCM2's histone-binding activity is critical for parental histone recycling during replication, helping to maintain epigenetic information — disruption of which accelerates aging phenotypes. Adequate MCM2 function therefore suppresses genomic instability and preserves epigenetic integrity, both of which are pro-longevity effects.",
  "confidence": 0.72,
  "key_pathways": [
    "DNA replication licensing (MCM2-7 helicase complex)",
    "Replication fork protection and genomic stability",
    "Parental histone recycling and epigenetic maintenance"
  ],
  "mechanism_class": "genomic_instability",
  "longevity_influence": "pro_longevity"
}

advisor

{
  "notes": "The model correctly predicted pro_longevity for Mcm2 in Mus musculus with high confidence (0.72). The mechanistic reasoning is excellent and well-grounded: it correctly identifies MCM2's role in DNA replication licensing via the MCM2-7 helicase complex, explains how loss of function leads to genomic instability (a hallmark of aging), and notably includes the histone-binding/parental histone recycling function which is a more nuanced and accurate mechanistic point relevant to epigenetic maintenance during aging. The reasoning about replication fork protection and genomic stability suppression as pro-longevity mechanisms is sound and consistent with published literature on MCM2 hypomorphic mouse models showing accelerated aging phenotypes.",
  "failure_mode": "correct",
  "answer_correct": true,
  "mechanism_correct": true,
  "reasoning_quality": 5,
  "ground_truth_questionable": false
}