cert
D. melanogaster
ceramide transfer protein
What the model saw
Gene: cert Organism: Drosophila melanogaster Known functions: ceramide transfer protein. ceramide binding. ceramide transfer activity. lipid binding. phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate binding.
View unredacted entry
ceramide transfer protein. ceramide binding. ceramide transfer activity. lipid binding. phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate binding.
Solver output
CERT (ceramide transfer protein) mediates the non-vesicular transfer of ceramide from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus, where ceramide is converted into sphingomyelin and complex glycosphingolipids. This transfer is directed by CERT's phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P) binding domain (FFAT/PH domain), which anchors it to the Golgi membrane. Proper ceramide trafficking is essential for maintaining membrane lipid homeostasis and regulating ceramide-dependent apoptotic and stress-signaling pathways. Excess free ceramide accumulation is pro-apoptotic and promotes cellular senescence, so CERT's activity in channeling ceramide toward sphingomyelin synthesis reduces cytotoxic ceramide pools. In Drosophila, disruption of sphingolipid homeostasis accelerates aging phenotypes and reduces lifespan, suggesting that CERT's normal function in ceramide flux supports longevity by limiting ceramide-driven stress signaling and maintaining membrane integrity.
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 predicted pro_longevity for the cert gene in Drosophila melanogaster. The mechanistic reasoning is sound and well-grounded in known sphingolipid biology: CERT transfers ceramide from ER to Golgi for sphingomyelin synthesis, reducing cytotoxic free ceramide pools, and disruption of sphingolipid homeostasis accelerates aging. The mechanism class "altered_intercellular_communication" is somewhat questionable - lipid homeostasis/membrane integrity or metabolic regulation would be more precise classifications for CERT's role, but the underlying biological reasoning is correct. Confidence of 0.62 is appropriately moderate given this is a less-studied longevity gene.
Raw API responses
solver
{
"reasoning": "CERT (ceramide transfer protein) mediates the non-vesicular transfer of ceramide from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus, where ceramide is converted into sphingomyelin and complex glycosphingolipids. This transfer is directed by CERT's phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P) binding domain (FFAT/PH domain), which anchors it to the Golgi membrane. Proper ceramide trafficking is essential for maintaining membrane lipid homeostasis and regulating ceramide-dependent apoptotic and stress-signaling pathways. Excess free ceramide accumulation is pro-apoptotic and promotes cellular senescence, so CERT's activity in channeling ceramide toward sphingomyelin synthesis reduces cytotoxic ceramide pools. In Drosophila, disruption of sphingolipid homeostasis accelerates aging phenotypes and reduces lifespan, suggesting that CERT's normal function in ceramide flux supports longevity by limiting ceramide-driven stress signaling and maintaining membrane integrity.",
"confidence": 0.62,
"key_pathways": [
"ceramide/sphingomyelin biosynthesis pathway",
"ER-to-Golgi ceramide transport",
"PI4P-dependent lipid transfer"
],
"mechanism_class": "altered_intercellular_communication",
"longevity_influence": "pro_longevity"
}advisor
{
"notes": "The model correctly predicted pro_longevity for the cert gene in Drosophila melanogaster. The mechanistic reasoning is sound and well-grounded in known sphingolipid biology: CERT transfers ceramide from ER to Golgi for sphingomyelin synthesis, reducing cytotoxic free ceramide pools, and disruption of sphingolipid homeostasis accelerates aging. The mechanism class \"altered_intercellular_communication\" is somewhat questionable - lipid homeostasis/membrane integrity or metabolic regulation would be more precise classifications for CERT's role, but the underlying biological reasoning is correct. Confidence of 0.62 is appropriately moderate given this is a less-studied longevity gene.",
"failure_mode": "correct",
"answer_correct": true,
"mechanism_correct": true,
"reasoning_quality": 4,
"ground_truth_questionable": false
}