Does C1q function differ based on subcellular localization or binding partner identity?
1. Synaptic C1q drives complement-dependent pruning, while microglial surface-associated C1q biases phagocyte state through receptor-specific signaling
Mechanism: C1q deposited on weak or stressed synapses preferentially nucleates the classical complement cascade (`C1q -> C4 -> C3`), generating opsonins that engage microglial CR3/ITGAM-ITGB2 and promote engulfment. In contrast, C1q bound directly to microglial receptors or pericellular ligands may alter microglial transcriptional state without requiring full downstream complement activation. This would make localization mechanistically decisive because synaptic C1q mainly marks substrate, while microglial C1q mainly modulates effector state.
Target: `C1QA/C1QB/C1QC`, `C4A/C4B`, `C3`, `ITGAM/ITGB2 (CR3)`, microglia, excitatory synapses
Supporting evidence: Synaptic pruning roles for C1q/C3 in development and disease are well established; microglial CR3 is implicated in engulfment. Confident PMIDs: 18083105, 24012419.
Falsifiable experiment: In human iPSC neuron-microglia co-cultures, tether C1q selectively to synapses versus microglial membranes using engineered binders. Measure C3 deposition, CR3-dependent engulfment, and microglial RNA-seq. Prediction: synaptic targeting increases C3 deposition and spine loss; microglial targeting alters inflammatory/phagocytic state even if C3 deposition is limited.
Confidence: 0.78
2. C1q outcomes are determined more by binding partner identity than by location: pentraxins and misfolded-protein ligands bias C1q toward distinct effector programs
Mechanism: C1q may act as a context decoder whose function depends on the molecular scaffold it binds. When associated with synaptic pentraxins or apoptotic-like surface cues, it promotes complement activation and pruning. When bound to aggregated `Aβ`, phosphatidylserine-rich debris, or extracellular matrix ligands, it may favor microglial clearance programs or chronic inflammatory activation. Under this model, “synaptic versus microglial” differences are secondary to the identity of the C1q-bound complex.
Target: `C1Q`, neuronal pentraxins (`NPTX1`, `NPTX2`), `APP/Aβ`, phosphatidylserine-remodeling pathways, complement cascade
Supporting evidence: C1q binds diverse ligands including aggregated proteins and apoptotic structures; complement activation in AD around plaques is well supported. I am not confident enough to attach specific PMIDs for the binding-partner hierarchy claim.
Falsifiable experiment: Reconstitute purified human C1q with defined ligands (`Aβ oligomers`, synaptic membrane fractions enriched for neuronal pentraxins, apoptotic blebs, ECM proteins) and expose microglia plus complement-sufficient serum. Quantify complement activation, receptor usage, cytokines, and engulfment. Prediction: ligand identity predicts downstream program better than bead location alone.
Confidence: 0.66
3. C1q bound to astrocyte-derived thrombospondin-rich extracellular matrix creates a “silent tagging” state distinct from inflammatory plaque-associated C1q
Mechanism: Astrocytes secrete synaptogenic ECM proteins such as thrombospondins. C1q associated with ECM near synapses may stabilize low-grade synapse tagging without fully activating inflammatory complement, whereas plaque-associated or damage-associated C1q complexes may recruit robust classical cascade activation. This would explain why C1q can correlate both with remodeling and with overt neurotoxicity.
Target: `C1Q`, `THBS1/THBS2`, astrocytes, perisynaptic ECM, classical complement pathway
Supporting evidence: Astrocytic ECM strongly shapes synaptic maintenance; C1q accumulates at vulnerable synapses and plaques in neurodegeneration. I am not confident enough to cite a precise PMID for the thrombospondin-C1q interaction hypothesis.
Falsifiable experiment: Use organotypic brain slice cultures or iPSC tri-cultures with astrocyte-specific depletion of `THBS1/2`, then quantify C1q localization, C4/C3 deposition, and synapse elimination after `Aβ` or tau stress. Prediction: loss of thrombospondin-rich ECM redistributes C1q away from perisynaptic silent tagging and toward more inflammatory complement activation states.
Confidence: 0.51
4. ApoE isoform shifts C1q function by changing its binding landscape on synapses and plaques
Mechanism: `APOE4` may alter lipid, membrane, or aggregate surfaces so that C1q is preferentially recruited into pro-complement, pro-pruning, or plaque-associated inflammatory complexes, whereas `APOE3` permits more efficient debris packaging and clearance. The relevant determinant would be C1q’s biochemical partners shaped by ApoE-dependent lipidation states, not C1q alone.
Target: `APOE`, `C1Q`, `TREM2`, plaque-associated microglia, dystrophic synapses
Supporting evidence: ApoE genotype strongly influences complement-rich AD pathology and microglial state, but the exact C1q-partner mechanism remains unresolved. No PMID attached because I am not fully confident about a direct C1q-ApoE mechanistic citation.
Falsifiable experiment: Compare `APOE3` and `APOE4` human iPSC neuron-astrocyte-microglia cultures after `Aβ` exposure. Map C1q interactomes by proximity labeling or immunoprecipitation-mass spectrometry in synaptosome and plaque-like fractions. Prediction: `APOE4` shifts C1q toward complexes enriched for complement activators and phagocytic ligands, with greater synapse loss.
Confidence: 0.62
5. Microglial TREM2 state determines whether C1q-tagged material is cleared adaptively or drives chronic synaptotoxic inflammation
Mechanism: C1q tagging may be upstream of two divergent microglial responses. In a competent `TREM2` state, microglia clear C1q-opsonized debris efficiently. In `TREM2`-impaired states, the same C1q-tagged substrates persist and sustain complement amplification, cytokine production, and bystander synapse elimination. Thus, the apparent effect of C1q may depend on the receiving microglial state more than the initial site of deposition.
Target: `TREM2`, `TYROBP`, `C1Q`, `C3`, microglia
Supporting evidence: TREM2 is a major regulator of microglial response to neurodegenerative pathology, and complement activation is coupled to synapse loss in AD models. I am not confident enough to assign a specific PMID to the integrated C1q-TREM2 model.
Falsifiable experiment: In `TREM2` wild-type versus knockout microglia co-cultured with neurons, apply identical amounts of synapse-bound C1q and measure clearance kinetics, inflammatory transcriptional programs, and secondary spine loss. Prediction: `TREM2` loss converts a clearance-dominant response into persistent complement-associated injury.
Confidence: 0.69
6. Therapeutically sparing synaptic C1q recognition while blocking C1q-C1r/C1s activation could preserve beneficial debris sensing and prevent destructive complement amplification
Mechanism: If C1q has useful surveillance or cargo-recognition roles that depend on ligand binding but pathology requires downstream classical pathway activation, then inhibiting the `C1q-C1r-C1s` protease step should be safer than pan-C1q depletion. This predicts that harmful effects arise when C1q is converted from recognition molecule to cascade trigger.
Target: `C1Q`, `C1R`, `C1S`, classical complement pathway
Supporting evidence: Classical pathway activation downstream of C1q is implicated in synapse loss and neuroinflammation; the distinction between recognition and activation is biologically plausible but still unresolved in CNS disease. No PMID attached because I am not fully confident in a CNS-specific citation for this exact therapeutic framing.
Falsifiable experiment: Compare pan-C1q neutralization versus selective `C1r/C1s` inhibition in AD-model neuron-microglia co-cultures and in vivo. Readouts: synapse density, plaque compaction, debris clearance, microglial state, and cognition. Prediction: downstream blockade preserves more homeostatic clearance while reducing synaptotoxic complement activity.
Confidence: 0.74
7. Subcellularly restricted C1q at inhibitory synapses has a distinct role from excitatory synaptic C1q, creating circuit-specific vulnerability
Mechanism: C1q may not act uniformly across all synapses. Differential localization to inhibitory versus excitatory terminals, combined with distinct molecular partners, could produce opposite network consequences. Loss of inhibitory synapses would promote hyperexcitability, while loss of excitatory synapses would promote disconnection. This may explain heterogeneous effects across AD, tauopathy, and synucleinopathy circuits.
Target: `C1Q`, inhibitory synapse markers (`GAD1/GAD2`, `SLC6A1`), excitatory synapse markers (`VGLUT1/SLC17A7`), microglial complement receptors
Supporting evidence: Complement-mediated synapse loss is established, but synapse-class selectivity for C1q remains insufficiently resolved. No PMID attached because I am not confident of a precise citation.
Falsifiable experiment: Perform super-resolution imaging and synaptosome profiling from disease models and human tissue to quantify C1q occupancy on inhibitory versus excitatory synapses, then test selective vulnerability in co-culture. Prediction: one synapse class shows preferential C1q tagging and greater complement-dependent elimination, correlated with network phenotype.
Confidence: 0.57
Overall skeptical read: the debate is probably mixing three separable variables that have not been cleanly orthogonalized experimentally: `location`, `ligand identity`, and `receiver-cell state`. The strongest evidence supports synaptic C1q/C3/CR3-mediated pruning in development and AD models, but that does not by itself prove a distinct microglial surface-signaling program for C1q, nor a binding-partner hierarchy that dominates location. Much of the translational logic is still mouse-heavy and disease-model dependent. Key anchors: synaptic pruning by C1q/C3 in development ([PMID: 18083105](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18083105/)); early AD-model synapse loss via C1q/C3/CR3 ([PMID: 27033548](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5094372/)); direct `Aβ-C1q` binding and complement activation ([PMID: 8176223](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8176223/), [PMID: 11714802](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11714802/)); noncanonical C1q receptor signaling outside the CNS via `LAIR-1` ([PMID: 23093673](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3503216/)); `TREM2-C1q` interaction in neurodegeneration ([PMID: 37442133](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37442133/)); cell-type/synapse-class selectivity in AD mice ([PMID: 37118504](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37118504/)); neuronal pentraxins as C1q partners ([PMID: 33628204](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33628204/)); ApoE-C1q binding in inflammation ([PMID: 30692699](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30692699/)).
1. `Synaptic C1q prunes; microglial C1q signals state`
Weak evidence: the synaptic arm is well supported, but the microglial “surface-associated C1q reprograms microglia independent of cascade” arm is much less directly shown in CNS microglia. Most receptor-signaling evidence for C1q comes from peripheral myeloid cells, not resident brain microglia. Alternative mechanism: apparent “microglial C1q signaling” could just reflect autocrine/paracrine exposure to downstream complement fragments, Fc signals, or generic phagocytosis of opsonized cargo. Translational risk: a therapy built on this split may fail if microglia do not actually segregate into cascade-dependent and cascade-independent C1q programs in human brain. Falsify by forcing equal ligand identity and equal microglial state while varying only C1q location; if microglial-tethered C1q does not induce a distinct transcriptional/phagocytic program when downstream complement is genetically blocked, the claim weakens sharply.
2. `Binding partner identity matters more than location`
Weak evidence: this is plausible, but the hierarchy claim is mostly asserted rather than demonstrated. There is direct evidence for `Aβ` and neuronal pentraxin binding to C1q, but not a general proof that ligand identity dominates spatial context across CNS substrates. Alternative mechanism: microenvironmental geometry, membrane density, local complement regulators, and which cell sees the complex first may matter more than ligand chemistry alone. Translational risk: “ligand-selective” targeting is hard because C1q is promiscuous and disease tissue contains mixed complexes. Falsify with a factorial experiment that independently varies `ligand`, `location`, and `receiver cell`; if location explains as much variance as ligand identity in complement activation or engulfment, this hypothesis is overstated.
3. `Astrocyte thrombospondin-rich ECM creates silent C1q tagging`
Weak evidence: this is the weakest hypothesis in the set. The support is indirect and risks conflating canonical C1q with the broader C1q/TNF family or thrombospondin-related synaptogenic biology. I do not see strong primary evidence that `THBS1/2` are bona fide CNS C1q-binding scaffolds that impose a low-inflammatory state. Alternative mechanism: perisynaptic ECM effects may be mediated by altered synapse maturation, glial access, or complement regulator distribution rather than a specific `C1q-THBS` complex. Translational risk: high chance of chasing an interaction that is not central in vivo. Falsify by direct biochemical binding and in situ proximity assays first; if endogenous brain `C1q-THBS1/2` complexes are not robustly detectable, the model should be dropped before therapeutic reasoning.
4. `APOE isoform reshapes the C1q binding landscape`
Weak evidence: ApoE and C1q can interact, but the leap from that to isoform-specific synaptic versus plaque C1q partitioning is still speculative. The causal chain `APOE4 -> altered C1q partner landscape -> more pruning/inflammation` is not yet cleanly established. Alternative mechanism: ApoE isoforms could alter plaque compaction, lipid trafficking, or microglial activation upstream of C1q rather than through direct C1q-complex remodeling. Translational risk: ApoE effects are pleiotropic, so a C1q-centered intervention may miss the dominant ApoE biology. Falsify by swapping ApoE isoforms while holding `Aβ` burden, lipidation state, and microglial genotype constant, then testing whether C1q interactomes and functional outputs still diverge.
5. `TREM2 state decides whether C1q tagging is adaptive or toxic`
Weak evidence: this one is stronger than most because there is direct evidence that TREM2 binds C1q and restrains complement-mediated synapse loss. But the “same tagged substrate, divergent outcome solely by TREM2 state” framing is still too simple; astrocytes and other receptors also shift the outcome. Alternative mechanism: TREM2 effects may mainly alter microglial metabolism, survival, clustering, or plaque handling, with C1q being one branch rather than the master switch. Translational risk: TREM2 modulation can have stage-specific and pathology-specific effects, so combining it with C1q targeting may not generalize across AD, tauopathy, and human aging. Falsify by presenting identical C1q-opsonized substrates to `TREM2 WT` and `KO` microglia in a complement-defined system while measuring uptake efficiency versus inflammatory amplification; if TREM2 loss changes only uptake kinetics but not injury-state transition, the claim is overstated.
6. `Block C1r/C1s, spare C1q recognition`
Weak evidence: conceptually attractive, but it assumes C1q recognition is mostly beneficial and downstream protease activation is mostly harmful in the CNS. That partition is not settled. Some harmful effects may arise from C1q binding itself, while some downstream activation may aid debris handling. Alternative mechanism: pathology may depend on amount, chronicity, and local regulator failure, not simply the recognition-versus-activation step. Translational risk: selective `C1r/C1s` blockade might preserve some unwanted C1q receptor signaling, or impair host defense enough to erase CNS benefit. Falsify by head-to-head comparison of `anti-C1q` versus `C1r/C1s` inhibition in the same model with matched target engagement, including infection susceptibility and plaque/debris handling, not just synapse counts.
7. `C1q has distinct inhibitory-versus-excitatory synapse roles`
Weak evidence: there is evidence of cell-type/synapse-class selective engulfment in AD mouse models, but that does not prove C1q itself has fundamentally different biochemical programs at inhibitory versus excitatory synapses. The selectivity could arise downstream from glial preference, anatomy, or activity state. Alternative mechanism: synapse-class vulnerability may be driven by network activity, local ECM, or astrocyte-versus-microglia division of labor rather than synapse-intrinsic C1q coding. Translational risk: circuit findings from one model or brain region may not generalize to human disease. Falsify with purified inhibitory and excitatory synaptosomes matched for damage state and exposed to identical C1q/complement conditions; if class selectivity disappears outside the intact circuit, the effect is probably contextual rather than intrinsic.
Bottom line: hypotheses `1`, `5`, and `6` are the most testable and biologically grounded; `2` is plausible but underspecified; `3` is currently too conjectural; `4` and `7` may be partly true but are likely over-attributing causality to C1q instead of broader glial/pathology context. The cleanest decisive experiment is a full-factorial design that independently manipulates `C1q location`, `binding partner`, `complement activation competence`, and `microglial state` in one humanized system.
Triage
The ideas worth carrying forward are `6`, `5`, `1`, `2`, `4`, and `7`, in that order. I would drop `3` for now; it is too speculative to support a drug program.
The main translational point is that only one of these is close to a druggable thesis today: `block classical-pathway activation downstream of C1q` rather than trying to solve all C1q biology first. The rest are mostly mechanism, stratification, or endpoint-selection hypotheses.
Per Idea
`6. Spare C1q recognition, block C1r/C1s activation`
- Feasibility: Highest. This is the cleanest therapeutic hypothesis because the target class already exists. C1s inhibition is clinically validated outside CNS, which materially reduces target-risk.
- Druggability: High for systemic antibodies; medium for CNS disease because BBB exposure is the bottleneck. Best near-term route is a peripherally dosed biologic with demonstrated CSF target engagement, not a brand-new CNS-only chemistry program.
- Biomarkers: `CH50/classical pathway activity`, free/total `C1q`, `C4d/C4a`, `C3 fragments`, CSF `C1q/C3`, synaptic injury markers (`neurogranin`, `SNAP-25`), `NfL`, and ideally `SV2A PET`.
- Model systems: Human iPSC neuron-microglia-astrocyte tri-cultures with human complement; complement-sufficient synaptosome assays; tau plus amyloid mouse models; NHP PK/CSF target-engagement work if moving a biologic.
- Safety: Better than pan-`C3/C5`, but not trivial. Risks are infection susceptibility, impaired immune-complex clearance, and chronic innate-immune perturbation. Vaccination/infection monitoring would be required.
- Timeline/cost: Repurposing-like translational package `18–30 months`, `$15M–35M` to get to a strong go/no-go package; new CNS-enabled program to IND more like `4–6 years`, `$40M–90M`.
- Verdict: Lead program.
`5. TREM2 state determines whether C1q tagging is adaptive or toxic`
- Feasibility: Good biology, but therapeutically more complicated than `6` because TREM2 effects are stage- and context-dependent.
- Druggability: Medium. TREM2 antibodies/agonists and peptide approaches are plausible, but the risk is that boosting microglia in the wrong disease stage worsens inflammatory injury.
- Biomarkers: `sTREM2`, CSF `C1q/C3`, `GFAP`, `NfL`, synaptic markers, plaque/tau PET, and if possible `SV2A PET`. This is a biomarker-heavy program.
- Model systems: Isogenic `TREM2 WT/R47H/KO` human microglia in tri-culture; matched opsonized-substrate assays; tau and amyloid+trem2 mouse models.
- Safety: Microglial overstimulation, edema/inflammatory worsening, pathology-stage mismatch, and uncertain chronic dosing window.
- Timeline/cost: `2–3 years`, `$20M–50M` to de-risk the biology; full clinical path in AD would likely be `6–8+ years`, `$80M+`.
- Verdict: Strong modifier/combination axis, not the first standalone bet.
`1. Synaptic C1q drives pruning; microglial surface C1q signals state`
- Feasibility: Biologically plausible, but still not cleanly orthogonalized from ligand identity and microglial state.
- Druggability: Medium-low as stated. “Location-selective C1q modulation” is not yet a drug format. Practical targets would still be `C1q`, `C1s`, `CR3`, or receptor-blocking decoys.
- Biomarkers: Same complement/synaptic panel as above, plus high-content imaging of synaptic vs microglial C1q localization in human tissue and co-cultures.
- Model systems: Best tested in humanized tri-culture with engineered C1q tethering and complement-defined media. Mouse work alone will not settle it.
- Safety: If wrong, you build a precision therapy on an artificial distinction and end up with broad complement suppression anyway.
- Timeline/cost: `18–24 months`, `$10M–25M` to resolve the mechanism enough for portfolio decisions.
- Verdict: Worth funding as a decision-enabling biology program, not yet as a direct asset thesis.
`2. Binding partner identity matters more than location`
- Feasibility: Plausible, but underspecified. This is a discovery program, not a near-term development thesis.
- Druggability: Low-medium. Ligand- or complex-selective blockade is hard because C1q is promiscuous and disease tissue contains mixed complexes.
- Biomarkers: Complex-specific IP-MS/proximity assays, CSF EV `C1q`, ligand panels (`Aβ`, neuronal pentraxins), and downstream complement activation markers.
- Model systems: Full-factorial human assays varying `ligand`, `location`, complement competence, and receiver cell state. This is where the answer will come from.
- Safety: Off-target blockade of beneficial debris handling is a real risk if complex selectivity is imperfect.
- Timeline/cost: `2–4 years`, `$20M–45M` before you know whether there is a tractable complex-selective drug concept.
- Verdict: Good platform/discovery work; weak standalone therapeutic hypothesis today.
`4. APOE isoform reshapes the C1q binding landscape`
- Feasibility: Best viewed as a stratification hypothesis. ApoE biology is real; the C1q-centric causal chain is still loose.
- Druggability: Medium only if you target `APOE` biology broadly or use genotype as an enrichment variable. It is not yet a clean C1q program.
- Biomarkers: `APOE` genotype, CSF `ApoE`, `C1q`, `sTREM2`, `GFAP`, amyloid/tau PET, synaptic markers.
- Model systems: Isogenic `APOE3/APOE4` neuron-astrocyte-microglia cultures; plaque-like aggregate systems; human brain proteomics.
- Safety: ApoE interventions are pleiotropic and can affect lipid handling, vascular biology, and amyloid dynamics.
- Timeline/cost: `2–3 years`, `$15M–35M` to establish whether ApoE status meaningfully predicts response to a complement intervention.
- Verdict: Valuable for patient selection and combination design, not as the primary mechanism.
`7. Distinct inhibitory vs excitatory synapse roles`
- Feasibility: Biologically interesting, but therapeutically premature.
- Druggability: Low. This is more likely to improve indication choice, circuit endpoints, and dose window than to define a drug target.
- Biomarkers: `SV2A PET` for global synaptic density, EEG/MEG network hyperexcitability, region-specific imaging, synaptosome proteomics. There is no mature fluid biomarker for inhibitory-vs-excitatory loss.
- Model systems: Circuit-aware slice systems, electrophysiology-heavy co-cultures, region-specific in vivo models.
- Safety: Biggest risk is perturbing network balance without knowing which synapse class you are sparing or harming.
- Timeline/cost: `2–4 years`, `$10M–30M`.
- Verdict: Keep as an endpoint-design subproject, not a lead drug hypothesis.
Program Recommendation
If this were a portfolio review, I would do:
1. Advance `6` as the lead translational hypothesis.
2. Run `5` in parallel as a response-modifier/combination hypothesis.
3. Fund `1` as the key mechanism-resolution experiment.
4. Keep `2`, `4`, and `7` as exploratory stratification packages.
5. Stop `3` unless direct endogenous `C1q-THBS` complexes are first shown in human brain.
The most realistic path is not “find the one true role of C1q first.” It is: prove that selective classical-pathway blockade preserves synapses in a humanized system, then use `TREM2`, `APOE`, and circuit-bias biology to decide who should get it and when.
Sources: [PMID 18083105](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18083105/), [PMID 27033548](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5094372/), [PMID 37442133](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37442133/), [PMID 33628204](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33628204/), [PMID 30692699](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30692699/), [PMID 37118504](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37118504/), [PMID 8176223](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8176223/), [PMID 29202623](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29202623/), [Annexon ANX005 Phase 3 update, June 25 2024](https://ir.annexonbio.com/news-releases/news-release-details/annexon-presented-additional-positive-phase-3-results-anx005-c1q), [PMID 37246953](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37246953/), [PMID 37023079](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37023079/), [PMID 40091552](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40091552/), [SV2A PET in AD](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7383876/).
If you want, I can convert this into a structured scorecard with `druggability / biomarker readiness / model readiness / safety / timeline / cost` scored `1–5` for direct insertion into SciDEX.
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In a competent TREM2 program, microglia clear tagged material efficiently; in TREM2-impaired states, the same substrates persist, amplifying complement and bystander synapse loss.","target_gene":"TREM2,TYROBP,C1QA,C1QB,C1QC,C3","dimension_scores":{"evidence_strength":0.71,"novelty":0.68,"feasibility":0.72,"therapeutic_potential":0.73,"mechanistic_plausibility":0.81,"druggability":0.62,"safety_profile":0.52,"competitive_landscape":0.57,"data_availability":0.7,"reproducibility":0.66},"composite_score":0.67,"evidence_for":[{"claim":"TREM2 directly interacts with C1q in neurodegeneration-relevant contexts and appears to restrain complement-mediated synapse loss.","pmid":"37442133"},{"claim":"Microglial state is a major determinant of neurodegenerative response programs, making it plausible that identical opsonized substrates can lead to different outcomes.","pmid":"40091552"}],"evidence_against":[{"claim":"TREM2 biology is pleiotropic, and observed effects may reflect broader changes in metabolism, clustering, or plaque handling rather than a specific C1q decision node.","pmid":"37023079"},{"claim":"The claim that TREM2 state alone determines adaptive versus toxic handling likely overstates causality because astrocytes, other receptors, and complement regulators also shape outcome.","pmid":"37442133"}]},{"title":"C1q has spatially distinct functions, with synapse-bound C1q primarily nucleating complement-dependent pruning and microglia-associated C1q potentially modulating effector state through receptor-specific signaling","description":"The strongest spatial model is a split between substrate marking at synapses and state modulation at microglia. The synaptic arm is well grounded, but the microglial surface-signaling arm remains insufficiently demonstrated in CNS microglia and must be tested under complement-defined conditions that isolate location from ligand identity and microglial state.","target_gene":"C1QA,C1QB,C1QC,C4A,C4B,C3,ITGAM,ITGB2,LAIR1","dimension_scores":{"evidence_strength":0.64,"novelty":0.76,"feasibility":0.69,"therapeutic_potential":0.59,"mechanistic_plausibility":0.74,"druggability":0.41,"safety_profile":0.57,"competitive_landscape":0.71,"data_availability":0.63,"reproducibility":0.58},"composite_score":0.63,"evidence_for":[{"claim":"Synaptic C1q/C3/CR3 pruning is strongly supported in development and disease models, consistent with a location-specific synaptic function.","pmid":"18083105"},{"claim":"Microglial CR3-mediated engulfment downstream of synaptic complement deposition supports a substrate-marking role for synaptic C1q.","pmid":"24012419"},{"claim":"Noncanonical C1q receptor signaling exists in myeloid cells, making a microglial signaling arm biologically plausible.","pmid":"23093673"}],"evidence_against":[{"claim":"Direct evidence for a distinct cascade-independent microglial surface-signaling program driven by C1q in resident CNS microglia is limited.","pmid":"23093673"},{"claim":"Apparent location effects may instead arise from unmeasured ligand identity, complement fragment exposure, or pre-existing microglial state.","pmid":"27033548"}]},{"title":"C1q effector output is determined more by binding partner identity than by subcellular location","description":"Under this model, C1q is a context decoder whose downstream program depends chiefly on the biochemical identity of the complex it forms, such as neuronal pentraxins, Aβ aggregates, apoptotic membranes, or ECM ligands. Spatial localization remains relevant, but as a secondary variable relative to ligand chemistry and complex composition.","target_gene":"C1QA,C1QB,C1QC,NPTX1,NPTX2,APP,C3","dimension_scores":{"evidence_strength":0.58,"novelty":0.73,"feasibility":0.64,"therapeutic_potential":0.54,"mechanistic_plausibility":0.77,"druggability":0.39,"safety_profile":0.56,"competitive_landscape":0.69,"data_availability":0.61,"reproducibility":0.55},"composite_score":0.61,"evidence_for":[{"claim":"C1q binds diverse ligands including Aβ, indicating that binding-partner identity can shape downstream complement activation.","pmid":"8176223"},{"claim":"Aβ-C1q complexes activate complement in AD-relevant settings, supporting ligand-specific effector programs.","pmid":"11714802"},{"claim":"Neuronal pentraxins interact with C1q, providing a plausible synaptic ligand axis distinct from plaque-associated ligands.","pmid":"33628204"}],"evidence_against":[{"claim":"No decisive CNS study yet demonstrates that ligand identity explains more variance than location when ligand, receiver cell, and complement competence are independently controlled.","pmid":"33628204"},{"claim":"Microenvironmental geometry, local complement regulators, and which cell encounters the complex first may rival or exceed ligand identity in determining outcome.","pmid":"27033548"}]},{"title":"APOE isoform modifies the C1q binding landscape, biasing C1q toward inflammatory plaque-associated or synaptotoxic complexes in APOE4 contexts","description":"This is best treated as a stratification and response-modifier hypothesis rather than a primary C1q mechanism. APOE4 may alter lipid and aggregate surfaces in ways that shift C1q interactomes toward complement-amplifying complexes, but the causal chain remains loose because ApoE biology is highly pleiotropic.","target_gene":"APOE,C1QA,C1QB,C1QC,TREM2,APP","dimension_scores":{"evidence_strength":0.55,"novelty":0.67,"feasibility":0.67,"therapeutic_potential":0.57,"mechanistic_plausibility":0.68,"druggability":0.48,"safety_profile":0.49,"competitive_landscape":0.52,"data_availability":0.69,"reproducibility":0.54},"composite_score":0.59,"evidence_for":[{"claim":"ApoE can bind C1q in inflammatory contexts, supporting a direct biochemical connection between these pathways.","pmid":"30692699"},{"claim":"APOE genotype strongly shapes AD-relevant plaque and glial biology, making C1q complex remodeling plausible as one downstream consequence.","pmid":"30692699"}],"evidence_against":[{"claim":"ApoE effects may operate mainly through lipid trafficking, plaque compaction, or microglial activation upstream of C1q rather than through direct C1q-complex remodeling.","pmid":"37023079"},{"claim":"Isoform-specific synaptic versus plaque partitioning of C1q has not been cleanly established under controlled conditions.","pmid":"30692699"}]},{"title":"C1q shows synapse-class-specific roles, with inhibitory versus excitatory synapses exhibiting different susceptibility to C1q-associated elimination","description":"This hypothesis is biologically plausible and potentially important for circuit-level phenotypes, but current support is stronger for contextual selectivity than for distinct intrinsic C1q biochemical programs at inhibitory versus excitatory terminals. It is more valuable for endpoint design and disease-stage interpretation than as a near-term therapeutic thesis.","target_gene":"C1QA,C1QB,C1QC,GAD1,GAD2,SLC6A1,SLC17A7,ITGAM,ITGB2","dimension_scores":{"evidence_strength":0.52,"novelty":0.64,"feasibility":0.6,"therapeutic_potential":0.43,"mechanistic_plausibility":0.63,"druggability":0.24,"safety_profile":0.47,"competitive_landscape":0.66,"data_availability":0.58,"reproducibility":0.5},"composite_score":0.53,"evidence_for":[{"claim":"AD mouse models show cell-type and synapse-class selective engulfment, consistent with possible circuit-biased C1q vulnerability.","pmid":"37118504"},{"claim":"Complement-mediated synapse loss is established, leaving room for differential class susceptibility across circuits.","pmid":"27033548"}],"evidence_against":[{"claim":"Observed selectivity may arise from network activity, anatomy, or glial preference rather than synapse-intrinsic C1q coding.","pmid":"37118504"},{"claim":"Evidence does not yet show fundamentally distinct C1q biochemical programs at inhibitory versus excitatory synapses.","pmid":"37118504"}]}],"knowledge_edges":[{"source":"C1Q","relation":"activates_classical_complement_at","target":"vulnerable_synapses","evidence":"Supported by developmental and AD-model synaptic pruning literature.","pmid":"18083105"},{"source":"C3_opsonization","relation":"promotes_engulfment_via","target":"CR3_microglia","evidence":"Microglial CR3 is implicated in complement-mediated synapse elimination.","pmid":"24012419"},{"source":"C1Q","relation":"binds","target":"amyloid_beta","evidence":"Direct Aβ-C1q binding supports ligand-dependent complement activation.","pmid":"8176223"},{"source":"C1Q","relation":"binds","target":"neuronal_pentraxins","evidence":"Neuronal pentraxins are candidate synaptic binding partners that may shape C1q function.","pmid":"33628204"},{"source":"TREM2","relation":"interacts_with","target":"C1Q","evidence":"TREM2-C1q interaction links receiver-cell state to complement-associated synapse injury.","pmid":"37442133"},{"source":"APOE","relation":"binds_or_modulates","target":"C1Q_complexes","evidence":"ApoE-C1q interaction suggests genotype-dependent remodeling of inflammatory complexes.","pmid":"30692699"},{"source":"C1R_C1S_inhibition","relation":"may_reduce","target":"complement_mediated_synapse_loss","evidence":"Therapeutic rationale from classical-pathway blockade preserving recognition while limiting amplification.","pmid":"37246953"},{"source":"synapse_class_context","relation":"modulates","target":"C1Q_associated_vulnerability","evidence":"Selective engulfment across synapse classes suggests circuit context affects complement outcomes.","pmid":"37118504"}],"synthesis_summary":"The debate converges on a central conclusion: current evidence does not justify a single-variable answer. C1q biology in neurodegeneration is best explained by the interaction of three partially separable axes: subcellular location, binding-partner identity, and receiver-cell state. The most secure evidence supports a synaptic C1q to C4/C3 to CR3 pruning pathway, while claims about distinct microglial surface-associated C1q signaling remain plausible but underproven in CNS microglia. The cleanest mechanistic next step is a humanized full-factorial system that independently manipulates C1q location, ligand identity, complement activation competence, and microglial state.\n\nFor translational prioritization, the leading hypothesis is not that we must fully solve every spatial role of C1q before acting, but that selectively blocking classical-pathway activation downstream of C1q is the most defensible near-term intervention. TREM2 state emerges as the strongest modifier axis, likely determining whether identical C1q-tagged substrates are cleared adaptively or converted into chronic inflammatory injury. Binding-partner and APOE effects are credible stratification layers, while inhibitory-versus-excitatory selectivity is better framed as a circuit-endpoint question than a primary drug thesis. The thrombospondin-rich ECM model is currently too speculative to rank as actionable."}