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Cdk5

D. melanogaster

Cyclin-dependent kinase 5

What the model saw

Gene: Cdk5
Organism: Drosophila melanogaster
Known functions: Cyclin-dependent kinase 5. ATP binding. cyclin-dependent protein serine/threonine kinase activity. protein binding. protein kinase activity. protein serine kinase activity. protein serine/threonine kinase activity.
View unredacted entry
Cyclin-dependent kinase 5. ATP binding. cyclin-dependent protein serine/threonine kinase activity. protein binding. protein kinase activity. protein serine kinase activity. protein serine/threonine kinase activity.

Solver output

Predicted influence
Anti-longevity
Confidence
65%
Mechanism
Cellular senescence
Reasoning

CDK5 is an atypical cyclin-dependent kinase that, unlike canonical CDKs, is primarily active in post-mitotic cells (notably neurons) and is activated by non-cyclin activators p35/p25. In aging contexts, aberrant or hyperactivated CDK5 (particularly via the truncated p25 activator) drives pathological phosphorylation of substrates such as tau, leading to neurofibrillary tangle-like pathology, neuronal dysfunction, and accelerated neurodegeneration. In Drosophila, CDK5 activity has been linked to synaptic dysfunction and neuronal aging phenotypes. Its serine/threonine kinase activity, when dysregulated, promotes cellular damage rather than repair, contributing to age-associated neuronal decline. Additionally, CDK5 can phosphorylate and modulate senescence-related pathways, making its normal (and especially its overactive) function a driver of aging rather than a suppressor.

Key pathways
CDK5/p35-p25 neurodegeneration pathwaytau hyperphosphorylationneuronal senescence 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
Incorrect
Mechanism
Incorrect
Reasoning quality
2/5
Failure mode
Confident wrong
Notes

The model predicted anti_longevity while the ground truth is pro_longevity. The model's reasoning focused on CDK5's pathological role in neurodegeneration (via p25/tau hyperphosphorylation), which is a well-known mammalian aging mechanism, but this doesn't appear to reflect the actual role of Cdk5 in Drosophila longevity. The model extrapolated from mammalian neurodegenerative disease contexts to Drosophila aging, which led to an incorrect prediction. The mechanism described (cellular senescence, tau pathology) is also likely incorrect for the Drosophila context where Cdk5 appears to be pro-longevity. The model showed moderate confidence (0.65) but was still wrong on both the direction and likely the mechanism.

Raw API responses

solver

{
  "reasoning": "CDK5 is an atypical cyclin-dependent kinase that, unlike canonical CDKs, is primarily active in post-mitotic cells (notably neurons) and is activated by non-cyclin activators p35/p25. In aging contexts, aberrant or hyperactivated CDK5 (particularly via the truncated p25 activator) drives pathological phosphorylation of substrates such as tau, leading to neurofibrillary tangle-like pathology, neuronal dysfunction, and accelerated neurodegeneration. In Drosophila, CDK5 activity has been linked to synaptic dysfunction and neuronal aging phenotypes. Its serine/threonine kinase activity, when dysregulated, promotes cellular damage rather than repair, contributing to age-associated neuronal decline. Additionally, CDK5 can phosphorylate and modulate senescence-related pathways, making its normal (and especially its overactive) function a driver of aging rather than a suppressor.",
  "confidence": 0.65,
  "key_pathways": [
    "CDK5/p35-p25 neurodegeneration pathway",
    "tau hyperphosphorylation",
    "neuronal senescence signaling"
  ],
  "mechanism_class": "cellular_senescence",
  "longevity_influence": "anti_longevity"
}

advisor

{
  "notes": "The model predicted anti_longevity while the ground truth is pro_longevity. The model's reasoning focused on CDK5's pathological role in neurodegeneration (via p25/tau hyperphosphorylation), which is a well-known mammalian aging mechanism, but this doesn't appear to reflect the actual role of Cdk5 in Drosophila longevity. The model extrapolated from mammalian neurodegenerative disease contexts to Drosophila aging, which led to an incorrect prediction. The mechanism described (cellular senescence, tau pathology) is also likely incorrect for the Drosophila context where Cdk5 appears to be pro-longevity. The model showed moderate confidence (0.65) but was still wrong on both the direction and likely the mechanism.",
  "failure_mode": "confident_wrong",
  "answer_correct": false,
  "mechanism_correct": false,
  "reasoning_quality": 2,
  "ground_truth_questionable": false
}