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calu-1

C. elegans

EF-hand domain-containing protein;Reticulocalbin-3

What the model saw

Gene: calu-1
Organism: Caenorhabditis elegans
Known functions: EF-hand domain-containing protein;Reticulocalbin-3. calcium ion binding.
View unredacted entry
EF-hand domain-containing protein;Reticulocalbin-3. calcium ion binding.

Solver output

Predicted influence
Unclear
Confidence
35%
Mechanism
Unclear
Reasoning

calu-1 encodes a reticulocalbin-3 homolog with EF-hand domains that binds calcium ions, likely functioning in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen as a calcium-buffering/sensing protein. While ER calcium homeostasis is linked to proteostasis and ER stress responses, the specific role of reticulocalbin-3 in C. elegans aging is not clearly established from these annotations alone. EF-hand calcium-binding proteins can influence multiple aging-relevant pathways (ER stress, UPR, mitochondrial calcium transfer), but the directionality of calu-1's effect on longevity cannot be confidently inferred from calcium-binding function alone without knowing whether it promotes or dampens ER stress signaling. The molecular function is too general to assign a clear pro- or anti-longevity role.

Key pathways
ER calcium homeostasisunfolded protein response (UPR)proteostasis
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
Incorrect
Mechanism
Incorrect
Reasoning quality
2/5
Failure mode
Appropriately uncertain
Notes

The model predicted "unclear" with low confidence (0.35), while the ground truth is "pro_longevity." The model's reasoning about ER calcium homeostasis, UPR, and proteostasis is plausible but generic, and the model explicitly declined to assign a directionality. The model was appropriately uncertain given the limited annotation information, but ultimately failed to identify the correct pro-longevity classification. The mechanistic reasoning is neither confirmed nor denied by the ground truth entry alone.

Raw API responses

solver

{
  "reasoning": "calu-1 encodes a reticulocalbin-3 homolog with EF-hand domains that binds calcium ions, likely functioning in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen as a calcium-buffering/sensing protein. While ER calcium homeostasis is linked to proteostasis and ER stress responses, the specific role of reticulocalbin-3 in C. elegans aging is not clearly established from these annotations alone. EF-hand calcium-binding proteins can influence multiple aging-relevant pathways (ER stress, UPR, mitochondrial calcium transfer), but the directionality of calu-1's effect on longevity cannot be confidently inferred from calcium-binding function alone without knowing whether it promotes or dampens ER stress signaling. The molecular function is too general to assign a clear pro- or anti-longevity role.",
  "confidence": 0.35,
  "key_pathways": [
    "ER calcium homeostasis",
    "unfolded protein response (UPR)",
    "proteostasis"
  ],
  "mechanism_class": "unclear",
  "longevity_influence": "unclear"
}

advisor

{
  "notes": "The model predicted \"unclear\" with low confidence (0.35), while the ground truth is \"pro_longevity.\" The model's reasoning about ER calcium homeostasis, UPR, and proteostasis is plausible but generic, and the model explicitly declined to assign a directionality. The model was appropriately uncertain given the limited annotation information, but ultimately failed to identify the correct pro-longevity classification. The mechanistic reasoning is neither confirmed nor denied by the ground truth entry alone.",
  "failure_mode": "appropriately_uncertain",
  "answer_correct": false,
  "mechanism_correct": false,
  "reasoning_quality": 2,
  "ground_truth_questionable": false
}
calu-1 · Caenorhabditis elegans | Aging biology eval