mkk-4
C. elegans
MAP kinase kinase mkk-4
What the model saw
Gene: mkk-4 Organism: Caenorhabditis elegans Known functions: MAP kinase kinase mkk-4. ATP binding. MAP kinase kinase activity. mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase binding. protein kinase activity. protein serine kinase activity. protein tyrosine kinase activity.
View unredacted entry
MAP kinase kinase mkk-4. ATP binding. MAP kinase kinase activity. mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase binding. protein kinase activity. protein serine kinase activity. protein tyrosine kinase activity.
Solver output
MKK-4 is a MAP kinase kinase (MAPKK) that functions in the stress-activated MAPK cascade, specifically as an activator of downstream MAP kinases such as PMK-1 (p38) or JNK-like kinases. In C. elegans, the MKK-4/SEK-1 axis feeds into the p38 MAPK pathway, which when chronically activated can promote stress-induced cellular damage responses and inflammatory-like signaling. While acute activation of stress MAPKs can be protective, constitutive or excessive MAPKK activity in this cascade is associated with pro-aging outcomes by driving cellular senescence-like states and suppressing DAF-16/FOXO-mediated longevity signaling. MKK-4's dual serine and tyrosine kinase activity (characteristic of MAPKKs) places it upstream of stress kinase cascades that, when persistently active, antagonize the insulin/IGF-1 longevity pathway. Additionally, JNK pathway activation via MKK-4 can phosphorylate and inhibit DAF-16 nuclear localization, reducing expression of longevity-promoting target genes.
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
The model correctly predicts anti_longevity for mkk-4, but the mechanistic reasoning is problematic. The model invokes "cellular senescence" as the mechanism class, which is not a well-established concept in C. elegans biology. More critically, the reasoning conflates MKK-4's role: it claims JNK pathway activation via MKK-4 inhibits DAF-16 nuclear localization, but in C. elegans, JNK (JNK-1) signaling actually promotes DAF-16 nuclear localization and longevity — the opposite of what the model states. The model's reasoning about MKK-4 being anti-longevity through DAF-16 inhibition is mechanistically backwards for the JNK pathway. MKK-4 in C. elegans is known to activate SEK-1 and downstream stress kinases; its anti-longevity role is more likely related to its role in stress signaling pathways that when disrupted (loss of function) extend lifespan, but the model's specific mechanistic claims about DAF-16 inhibition via JNK are incorrect. The confidence of 0.65 is reasonable given the uncertainty, but the mechanistic explanation contains significant errors.
Raw API responses
solver
{
"reasoning": "MKK-4 is a MAP kinase kinase (MAPKK) that functions in the stress-activated MAPK cascade, specifically as an activator of downstream MAP kinases such as PMK-1 (p38) or JNK-like kinases. In C. elegans, the MKK-4/SEK-1 axis feeds into the p38 MAPK pathway, which when chronically activated can promote stress-induced cellular damage responses and inflammatory-like signaling. While acute activation of stress MAPKs can be protective, constitutive or excessive MAPKK activity in this cascade is associated with pro-aging outcomes by driving cellular senescence-like states and suppressing DAF-16/FOXO-mediated longevity signaling. MKK-4's dual serine and tyrosine kinase activity (characteristic of MAPKKs) places it upstream of stress kinase cascades that, when persistently active, antagonize the insulin/IGF-1 longevity pathway. Additionally, JNK pathway activation via MKK-4 can phosphorylate and inhibit DAF-16 nuclear localization, reducing expression of longevity-promoting target genes.",
"confidence": 0.65,
"key_pathways": [
"p38/JNK MAPK stress signaling cascade",
"DAF-16/FOXO transcription factor regulation",
"insulin/IGF-1 longevity pathway antagonism"
],
"mechanism_class": "cellular_senescence",
"longevity_influence": "anti_longevity"
}advisor
{
"notes": "The model correctly predicts anti_longevity for mkk-4, but the mechanistic reasoning is problematic. The model invokes \"cellular senescence\" as the mechanism class, which is not a well-established concept in C. elegans biology. More critically, the reasoning conflates MKK-4's role: it claims JNK pathway activation via MKK-4 inhibits DAF-16 nuclear localization, but in C. elegans, JNK (JNK-1) signaling actually promotes DAF-16 nuclear localization and longevity — the opposite of what the model states. The model's reasoning about MKK-4 being anti-longevity through DAF-16 inhibition is mechanistically backwards for the JNK pathway. MKK-4 in C. elegans is known to activate SEK-1 and downstream stress kinases; its anti-longevity role is more likely related to its role in stress signaling pathways that when disrupted (loss of function) extend lifespan, but the model's specific mechanistic claims about DAF-16 inhibition via JNK are incorrect. The confidence of 0.65 is reasonable given the uncertainty, but the mechanistic explanation contains significant errors.",
"failure_mode": "right_answer_wrong_reasoning",
"answer_correct": true,
"mechanism_correct": false,
"reasoning_quality": 2,
"ground_truth_questionable": false
}