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hyl-1

C. elegans

Ceramide synthase hyl-1;TLC domain-containing protein

What the model saw

Gene: hyl-1
Organism: Caenorhabditis elegans
Known functions: Ceramide synthase hyl-1;TLC domain-containing protein. sphingosine N-acyltransferase activity.
View unredacted entry
Ceramide synthase hyl-1;TLC domain-containing protein. sphingosine N-acyltransferase activity.

Solver output

Predicted influence
Pro-longevity
Confidence
62%
Mechanism
Altered intercellular communication
Reasoning

HYL-1 is a ceramide synthase (sphingosine N-acyltransferase) that catalyzes the acylation of sphingosine to produce ceramide, a bioactive sphingolipid. In C. elegans, ceramide and sphingolipid signaling are integral to stress responses, apoptosis regulation, and membrane integrity. Ceramide produced by hyl-1 has been linked to the germline signaling pathway that modulates longevity: ceramide accumulation can promote stress resistance and influence DAF-16/FOXO nuclear localization downstream of germline signals. Additionally, ceramide-mediated lipid signaling affects mitochondrial function and autophagy flux, both of which are critical determinants of lifespan in C. elegans. Loss of hyl-1 function alters the ceramide/sphingosine balance, which has been shown to reduce stress resistance and shorten lifespan, suggesting the normal function of hyl-1 is pro-longevity.

Key pathways
ceramide/sphingolipid signalingDAF-16/FOXO stress response pathwaygermline-to-soma longevity signaling
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
4/5
Failure mode
Correct
Notes

The model correctly predicted pro_longevity for hyl-1. The mechanistic reasoning is plausible and well-grounded: hyl-1 encodes a ceramide synthase, and ceramide/sphingolipid signaling is indeed relevant to C. elegans longevity. The model correctly identifies that loss of hyl-1 reduces stress resistance and shortens lifespan. The mechanism class "altered_intercellular_communication" is a somewhat loose fit for ceramide signaling (lipid metabolism/stress response might be more precise), but the reasoning text itself is more accurate than the mechanism class label. The confidence of 0.62 is appropriately moderate. Overall a solid prediction with good reasoning.

Raw API responses

solver

{
  "reasoning": "HYL-1 is a ceramide synthase (sphingosine N-acyltransferase) that catalyzes the acylation of sphingosine to produce ceramide, a bioactive sphingolipid. In C. elegans, ceramide and sphingolipid signaling are integral to stress responses, apoptosis regulation, and membrane integrity. Ceramide produced by hyl-1 has been linked to the germline signaling pathway that modulates longevity: ceramide accumulation can promote stress resistance and influence DAF-16/FOXO nuclear localization downstream of germline signals. Additionally, ceramide-mediated lipid signaling affects mitochondrial function and autophagy flux, both of which are critical determinants of lifespan in C. elegans. Loss of hyl-1 function alters the ceramide/sphingosine balance, which has been shown to reduce stress resistance and shorten lifespan, suggesting the normal function of hyl-1 is pro-longevity.",
  "confidence": 0.62,
  "key_pathways": [
    "ceramide/sphingolipid signaling",
    "DAF-16/FOXO stress response pathway",
    "germline-to-soma longevity signaling"
  ],
  "mechanism_class": "altered_intercellular_communication",
  "longevity_influence": "pro_longevity"
}

advisor

{
  "notes": "The model correctly predicted pro_longevity for hyl-1. The mechanistic reasoning is plausible and well-grounded: hyl-1 encodes a ceramide synthase, and ceramide/sphingolipid signaling is indeed relevant to C. elegans longevity. The model correctly identifies that loss of hyl-1 reduces stress resistance and shortens lifespan. The mechanism class \"altered_intercellular_communication\" is a somewhat loose fit for ceramide signaling (lipid metabolism/stress response might be more precise), but the reasoning text itself is more accurate than the mechanism class label. The confidence of 0.62 is appropriately moderate. Overall a solid prediction with good reasoning.",
  "failure_mode": "correct",
  "answer_correct": true,
  "mechanism_correct": true,
  "reasoning_quality": 4,
  "ground_truth_questionable": false
}