Senescence-Associated Myelin Lipid Remodeling

Target: PLA2G6/PLA2G4A Composite Score: 0.732 Price: $0.72▲44.5% Citation Quality: Pending neurodegeneration Status: debated
☰ Compare⚔ Duel⚛ Collideinteract with this hypothesis
🟢 Parkinson's Disease 🔮 Lysosomal / Autophagy 🔥 Neuroinflammation 🔴 Alzheimer's Disease 🟡 ALS / Motor Neuron Disease 🧠 Neurodegeneration
✓ All Quality Gates Passed
Evidence Strength Pending (0%)
38
Citations
2
Debates
23
Supporting
8
Opposing
Quality Report Card click to collapse
B+
Composite: 0.732
Top 15% of 1512 hypotheses
T1 Established
Multi-source converged and validated
T0 Axiom requires manual override only
C Mech. Plausibility 15% 0.40 Top 90%
D Evidence Strength 15% 0.30 Top 91%
A Novelty 12% 0.80 Top 23%
C Feasibility 12% 0.45 Top 73%
C+ Impact 12% 0.50 Top 81%
C+ Druggability 10% 0.55 Top 53%
C Safety Profile 8% 0.40 Top 81%
C Competition 6% 0.45 Top 87%
D Data Availability 5% 0.35 Top 92%
D Reproducibility 5% 0.30 Top 90%
Evidence
23 supporting | 8 opposing
Citation quality: 100%
Debates
2 sessions A+
Avg quality: 0.92
Convergence
1.00 A+ 30 related hypothesis share this target

From Analysis:

Senolytic therapy for age-related neurodegeneration

Senolytics targeting p16/p21+ senescent astrocytes and microglia may reduce SASP-driven neuroinflammation.

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Description

Mechanistic Overview


Senescence-Associated Myelin Lipid Remodeling starts from the claim that modulating PLA2G6/PLA2G4A within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "## Molecular Mechanism and Rationale The senescence-associated myelin lipid remodeling hypothesis centers on the aberrant activation of phospholipase A2 (PLA2) enzymes, specifically PLA2G6 and PLA2G4A, within p21+ senescent oligodendrocytes. Under physiological conditions, myelin membranes maintain their structural integrity through a precise lipid composition rich in galactosylceramide, sulfatide, and phosphatidylcholine, which creates the optimal dielectric properties necessary for saltatory conduction.

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Curated Mechanism Pathway

Curated pathway diagram from expert analysis

graph TD
    A["p21+ Senescent Oligodendrocytes
Cell Cycle Arrest G1"] B["PLA2G6 iPLA2 Overexpression
Calcium-Independent Phospholipase"] C["PLA2G4A cPLA2 Activation
Arachidonic Acid Release"] D["Myelin Lipid Remodeling
Galactosylceramide Sulfatide Dysregulation"] E["Metabolic Stress
ER Stress and ROS Generation"] F["Lysosomal Membrane Permeabilization
Cathepsin B/D Release"] G["Senolytic Therapy D+Q
Dasatinib + Quercetin"] H["Senescent Cell Clearance
p16Ink4a/p21 Targeted Apoptosis"] I["Healthy Oligodendrocyte
Remyelination Capacity"] J["PLA2 Inhibition
GSK2647544 or Similar"] K["Reduced Lipid Mediators
Anti-inflammatory Lipidome"] L["Myelin Integrity Restoration
Neuroprotective Lipid Environment"] A --> B --> C --> D --> E --> F G --> H --> I J --> K --> L F -.->|"Feedback"| A K -.->|"Reduces"| D

GTEx v10 Brain Expression

JSON

Median TPM across 13 brain regions for PLA2G6/PLA2G4A from GTEx v10.

Spinal cord cervical c-114.9 Cerebellum14.5 Cortex12.4 Cerebellar Hemisphere12.4 Frontal Cortex BA911.2 Caudate basal ganglia9.3 Hippocampus9.1 Hypothalamus9.0 Nucleus accumbens basal ganglia8.9 Substantia nigra8.6 Putamen basal ganglia8.4 Anterior cingulate cortex BA247.9 Amygdala7.7median TPM (GTEx v10)

Dimension Scores

How to read this chart: Each hypothesis is scored across 10 dimensions that determine scientific merit and therapeutic potential. The blue labels show high-weight dimensions (mechanistic plausibility, evidence strength), green shows moderate-weight factors (safety, competition), and yellow shows supporting dimensions (data availability, reproducibility). Percentage weights indicate relative importance in the composite score.
Mechanistic 0.40 (15%) Evidence 0.30 (15%) Novelty 0.80 (12%) Feasibility 0.45 (12%) Impact 0.50 (12%) Druggability 0.55 (10%) Safety 0.40 (8%) Competition 0.45 (6%) Data Avail. 0.35 (5%) Reproducible 0.30 (5%) KG Connect 0.33 (8%) 0.732 composite
31 citations 31 with PMID 15 medium Validation: 100% 23 supporting / 8 opposing
For (23)
7
8
(8) Against
High Medium Low
High Medium Low
Evidence Matrix — sortable by strength/year, click Abstract to expand
Evidence Types
9
9
13
MECH 9CLIN 9GENE 13EPID 0
ClaimStanceCategorySourceStrength ↕Year ↕Quality ↕PMIDsAbstract
Copy number deletion of PLA2G4A affects the suscep…SupportingCLINSchizophrenia (… MEDIUM20240.33PMID:38816399
Lipoprotein-associated and secreted phospholipases…SupportingCLINCirculation MEDIUM20100.33PMID:21098459-
Phospholipase A2 regulation of bovine endometrial …SupportingCLINReprod Biol End… MEDIUM20080.33PMID:18811942
Association between PLA2 gene polymorphisms and tr…SupportingGENEProstaglandins … MEDIUM20230.33PMID:37290257
Analysis of two major intracellular phospholipases…SupportingMECHJ Biol Chem MEDIUM20110.49PMID:21880721
Exacerbating factors induce different gene express…SupportingGENEInt Arch Allerg… MEDIUM20140.33PMID:25634111
The metabolic cascade leading to eicosanoid precur…SupportingGENEBiochim Biophys… MEDIUM20110.33PMID:21172452
Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy and PLA2G6-associa…OpposingGENEBrain Dev MEDIUM20170.53PMID:27884548
Neuropathology of genetic synucleinopathies with p…OpposingCLINMov Disord MEDIUM20170.33PMID:29124790
Exosomes as nanocarriers for brain-targeted delive…OpposingCLINJ Nanobiotechno… MEDIUM20250.33PMID:40533746
Nose-to-Brain Delivery of Circular RNA SCMH1-Loade…OpposingCLINAdv Mater MEDIUM20250.33PMID:40143778
Correction of dysregulated lipid metabolism normal…OpposingCLINNat Commun MEDIUM20250.60PMID:40216746
Ferroptosis as a potential molecular mechanism of …OpposingGENETransl Psychiat… MEDIUM20250.50PMID:40537482
Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulationOpposingGENEHandb Clin Neur… MEDIUM20180.33PMID:29325618
Neuroaxonal dystrophy in PLA2G6 knockout miceOpposingGENENeuropathology MEDIUM20150.33PMID:25950622
Arachidonic acid analog AACOCF3 suppresses cPLA2-n…SupportingMECHBiochem Pharmac…-20260.33PMID:41544858-
White matter aging drives microglial diversitySupportingMECHNeuron STRONG20210.55PMID:33606969
Microglia activation orchestrates CXCL10-mediated …SupportingGENENat Neurosci STRONG20250.60PMID:40404995
Ferroptosis of Microglia in Aging Human White Matt…SupportingCLINAnn Neurol STRONG20230.33PMID:37605362
Oligodendroglial fatty acid metabolism as a centra…SupportingMECHNat Neurosci STRONG20240.60PMID:39251890
Metabolism and functions of lipids in myelinSupportingMECHBiochim Biophys… STRONG20150.33PMID:25542507
White matter lipid alterations during aging in the…SupportingGENEGeroscience STRONG20250.33PMID:39312153
Differences in the post-stroke innate immune respo…SupportingGENESemin Immunopat… STRONG20230.33PMID:37045990
Towards microstructure-informed material models fo…SupportingMECHActa Biomater STRONG20200.33PMID:31887455
Metabolic Control of Astrocyte Pathogenic Activity…SupportingGENECell STRONG20190.59PMID:31813625
Anti-type M phospholipase A2 receptor antibody-pos…SupportingMECHIntern Med J STRONG20180.33PMID:29623981-
Contactin 1, a Potential New Antigen Target in Mem…SupportingMECHAm J Kidney Dis STRONG20220.33PMID:34762973
PRDX6 controls multiple sclerosis by suppressing i…SupportingCLINOncotarget STRONG20150.33PMID:26327204
Rejuvenation Modulation of Nucleus Pulposus Progen…SupportingGENEAdv Mater STRONG20250.33PMID:39969420
Cellular Senescence in Brain AgingSupportingGENEFront Aging Neu… STRONG20210.33PMID:33732142
Modification of the dermal matrix by senescence as…SupportingMECHRedox Biol STRONG20260.33PMID:41690117
Legacy Card View — expandable citation cards

Supporting Evidence 23

Copy number deletion of PLA2G4A affects the susceptibility and clinical phenotypes of schizophrenia. MEDIUM
Schizophrenia (Heidelb) · 2024 · PMID:38816399 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Phospholipase A2(PLA2) superfamily is recognized as being involved in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia by affecting lipid homeostasis in cell membranes. We hypothesized that PLA2 gene copy number variation (CNV) may affect PLA2 enzyme expression and be associated with schizophrenia risk. This study indicated that in the discovery stage, an increased copy number of PLA2G6 and the deletion of PLA2G3, PLA2G4A, PLA2G4F and PLA2G12F was associated with increased risk of schizophrenia. CNV segments involving six PLA2 genes were detected in publicly available datasets, including two deletion segments specific to the PLA2G4A gene. The relationship between the deletion of PLA2G4A and susceptibility to schizophrenia was then reaffirmed in the validation group of 806 individuals. There was a significant correlation between PLA2G4A deletion and the symptoms of poverty of thought in male patients and erotomanic delusion in females. Furthermore, ELISA results demonstrate a significant decrease in peripheral blood cytosolic PLA2(cPLA2) levels in patients with the PLA2G4A deletion genotype compared to those with normal and copy number duplicate genotypes. These data suggest that the functional copy number deletion in the PLA2G4A gene is associated with the risk of schizophrenia and clinical phenotypes by reducing the expression of cPLA2, which may be an indicator of susceptibility to schizophrenia.

Lipoprotein-associated and secreted phospholipases A₂ in cardiovascular disease: roles as biological effectors… MEDIUM
Lipoprotein-associated and secreted phospholipases A₂ in cardiovascular disease: roles as biological effectors and biomarkers.
Circulation · 2010 · PMID:21098459 · Q:0.33
Phospholipase A2 regulation of bovine endometrial (BEND) cell prostaglandin production. MEDIUM
Reprod Biol Endocrinol · 2008 · PMID:18811942 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Prostaglandins (PG), produced by the uterine endometrium, are key regulators of several reproductive events, including estrous cyclicity, implantation, pregnancy maintenance and parturition. Phospholipase A2 (PLA2) catalyzes the release of arachidonic acid from membrane phospholipids, the rate-limiting step in PG biosynthesis. The bovine endometrial (BEND) cell line has served as a model system for investigating regulation of signaling mechanisms involved in uterine PG production but information concerning the specific PLA2 enzymes involved and their role in regulation of this process is limited. The objectives of this investigation were to evaluate the expression and activities of calcium-dependent group IVA (PLA2G4A) and calcium-independent group VI (PLA2G6) enzymes in the regulation of BEND cell PG production. METHODS: Cells were grown to near-confluence and treated with phorbol 12, 13 dibutyrate (PDBu), interferon-tau (IFNT), the PLA2G4A inhibitor pyrrolidine-1 (PYR-1), the PLA2G6 inhibitor bromoenol lactone (BEL) and combinations of each. Concentrations of PGF2alpha and PGE2 released into the medium were determined. Western blot analysis was performed on cellular protein to determine effects of treatment on expression of PLA2G4A, PLA2G6 and PLA2G4C. PLA2 assays were performed on intact cells by measuring arachidonic acid and linoleic acid release and group-specific PLA2 activity assays were performed on cell lysates. RESULTS: BEND cells produced about 10-fold

Association between PLA2 gene polymorphisms and treatment response to antipsychotic medications: A study of an… MEDIUM
Association between PLA2 gene polymorphisms and treatment response to antipsychotic medications: A study of antipsychotic-naïve first-episode psychosis patients and nonadherent chronic psychosis patients.
Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids · 2023 · PMID:37290257 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Here we investigated whether antipsychotic treatment was influenced by three polymorphisms: rs10798059 (BanI) in the phospholipase A2 (PLA2)G4A gene, rs4375 in PLA2G6, and rs1549637 in PLA2G4C. A total of 186 antipsychotic-naïve first-episode psychosis patients or nonadherent chronic psychosis individuals (99 males and 87 females) were genotyped by polymerase chain reaction analysis/restriction fragment length polymorphism. At baseline, and after 8 weeks of treatment with various antipsychotic medications, we assessed patients' Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) scores, PANSS factors, and metabolic syndrome-related parameters (fasting plasma lipid and glucose levels, and body mass index). We found that PLA2G4A polymorphism influenced changes in PANSS psychopathology, and PLA2G6 polymorphism influenced changes in PANSS psychopathology and metabolic parameters. PLA2G4C polymorphism did not show any impact on PANSS psychopathology or metabolic parameters. The polymorphisms' effect sizes were estimated as moderate to strong, with contributions ranging from around 6.2-15.7%. Furthermore, the polymorphisms' effects manifested in a gender-specific manner.

Analysis of two major intracellular phospholipases A(2) (PLA(2)) in mast cells reveals crucial contribution of… MEDIUM
Analysis of two major intracellular phospholipases A(2) (PLA(2)) in mast cells reveals crucial contribution of cytosolic PLA(2)α, not Ca(2+)-independent PLA(2)β, to lipid mobilization in proximal mast cells and distal fibroblasts.
J Biol Chem · 2011 · PMID:21880721 · Q:0.49
ABSTRACT

Mast cells release a variety of mediators, including arachidonic acid (AA) metabolites, to regulate allergy, inflammation, and host defense, and their differentiation and maturation within extravascular microenvironments depend on the stromal cytokine stem cell factor. Mouse mast cells express two major intracellular phospholipases A(2) (PLA(2)s), namely group IVA cytosolic PLA(2) (cPLA(2)α) and group VIA Ca(2+)-independent PLA(2) (iPLA(2)β), and the role of cPLA(2)α in eicosanoid synthesis by mast cells has been well documented. Lipidomic analyses of mouse bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) lacking cPLA(2)α (Pla2g4a(-/-)) or iPLA(2)β (Pla2g6(-/-)) revealed that phospholipids with AA were selectively hydrolyzed by cPLA(2)α, not by iPLA(2)β, during FcεRI-mediated activation and even during fibroblast-dependent maturation. Neither FcεRI-dependent effector functions nor maturation-driven phospholipid remodeling was impaired in Pla2g6(-/-) BMMCs. Although BMMCs did not produce prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)), the AA released by cPLA(2)α from BMMCs during maturation was converted to PGE(2) by microsomal PGE synthase-1 (mPGES-1) in cocultured fibroblasts, and accordingly, Pla2g4a(-/-) BMMCs promoted microenvironmental PGE(2) synthesis less efficiently than wild-type BMMCs both in vitro and in vivo. Mice deficient in mPGES-1 (Ptges(-/-)) had an augmented local anaphylactic response. These results suggest that cPLA(2)α in mast cells is functionally coupled, through the AA transfer me

Exacerbating factors induce different gene expression profiles in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from asth… MEDIUM
Exacerbating factors induce different gene expression profiles in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from asthmatics, patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and healthy subjects.
Int Arch Allergy Immunol · 2014 · PMID:25634111 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite several common phenotypic features, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and severe asthma differ with regard to their causative factors and pathophysiology. Both diseases may be exacerbated by environmental factors, however, the molecular profiles of disease episodes have not been comprehensively studied. We identified differences in gene and protein expression profiles expressed by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of COPD patients, patients with atopic asthma and healthy subjects when challenged with exacerbating factors in vitro: lipopolysaccharide (LPS), house dust mite (HDM) and cat allergen. METHODS: PBMC isolated from patients with severe atopic asthma and COPD, as well as healthy subjects were stimulated with rDer p 1 DG, rFel d 1 DG and LPS. The changes in the expression of 47 genes belonging to five groups (phospholipase A2, eicosanoids, transcription factors, cytokines and airway remodeling) were studied using TaqMan low density array car

The metabolic cascade leading to eicosanoid precursors--desaturases, elongases, and phospholipases A2--is alte… MEDIUM
The metabolic cascade leading to eicosanoid precursors--desaturases, elongases, and phospholipases A2--is altered in Zucker fatty rats.
Biochim Biophys Acta · 2011 · PMID:21172452 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Metabolic syndrome characterized by insulin resistance and obesity is accompanied by severe lipid metabolism perturbations and chronic low-grade inflammation. However, many unresolved questions remained regarding the regulation that underlie dyslipidemia, particularly the regulation of the metabolic cascade (synthesis and release) leading to eicosanoid precursors release. This study was undertaken to investigate the regulation of desaturases/elongases and phospholipases A(2) during the establishment of metabolic syndrome. Our results showed that delta-6 desaturase as well as elongase-6 expressions were upregulated in 3-month-old Zucker fatty rats as compared to lean littermates, independently of SREBP-1c activation. We also demonstrated for the first time an increase of liver group VII phospholipase A(2) gene expression in the obese animals together with a strong specific inhibition of type IVA and VIA phospholipases A(2). These results suggest that the regulation of unsaturated fatty

White matter aging drives microglial diversity STRONG
Neuron · 2021 · PMID:33606969 · Q:0.55
ABSTRACT

Aging results in gray and white matter degeneration, but the specific microglial responses are unknown. Using single-cell RNA sequencing from white and gray matter separately, we identified white matter-associated microglia (WAMs), which share parts of the disease-associated microglia (DAM) gene signature and are characterized by activation of genes implicated in phagocytic activity and lipid metabolism. WAMs depend on triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) signaling and are aging dependent. In the aged brain, WAMs form independent of apolipoprotein E (APOE), in contrast to mouse models of Alzheimer's disease, in which microglia with the WAM gene signature are generated prematurely and in an APOE-dependent pathway similar to DAMs. Within the white matter, microglia frequently cluster in nodules, where they are engaged in clearing degenerated myelin. Thus, WAMs may represent a potentially protective response required to clear degenerated myelin accumulating during white matter aging and disease.

Microglia activation orchestrates CXCL10-mediated CD8(+) T cell recruitment to promote aging-related white mat… STRONG
Microglia activation orchestrates CXCL10-mediated CD8(+) T cell recruitment to promote aging-related white matter degeneration
Nat Neurosci · 2025 · PMID:40404995 · Q:0.60
ABSTRACT

Aging is the major risk factor for neurodegeneration and is associated with structural and functional alterations in white matter. Myelin is particularly vulnerable to aging, resulting in white matter-associated microglia activation. Here we used pharmacological and genetic approaches to investigate microglial functions related to aging-associated changes in myelinated axons of mice. Our results reveal that maladaptive microglia activation promotes the accumulation of harmful CD8+ T cells, leading to the degeneration of myelinated axons and subsequent impairment of brain function and behavior. We characterize glial heterogeneity and aging-related changes in white matter by single-cell and spatial transcriptomics and reveal elaborate glial-immune interactions. Mechanistically, we show that the CXCL10-CXCR3 axis is crucial for the recruitment and retention of CD8+ T cells in aged white matter, where they exert pathogenic effects. Our results indicate that myelin-related microglia dysfunction promotes adaptive immune reactions in aging and identify putative targets to mitigate their detrimental impact.

Ferroptosis of Microglia in Aging Human White Matter Injury STRONG
Ann Neurol · 2023 · PMID:37605362 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Because the role of white matter (WM) degenerating microglia (DM) in remyelination failure is unclear, we sought to define the core features of this novel population of aging human microglia. METHODS: We analyzed postmortem human brain tissue to define a population of DM in aging WM lesions. We used immunofluorescence staining and gene expression analysis to investigate molecular mechanisms related to the degeneration of DM. RESULTS: We found that DM, which accumulated myelin debris were selectively enriched in the iron-binding protein light chain ferritin, and accumulated PLIN2-labeled lipid droplets. DM displayed lipid peroxidation injury and enhanced expression for TOM20, a mitochondrial translocase, and a sensor of oxidative stress. DM also displayed enhanced expression of the DNA fragmentation marker phospho-histone H2A.X. We identified a unique set of ferroptosis-related genes involving iron-mediated lipid dysmetabolism and oxidative stress that were preferentially expressed in WM injury relative to gray matter neurodegeneration. INTERPRETATION: Ferroptosis appears to be a major mechanism of WM injury in Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia. WM DM are a novel therapeutic target to potentially reduce the impact of WM injury and myelin loss on the progression of cognitive impairment. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:1048-1066.

Oligodendroglial fatty acid metabolism as a central nervous system energy reserve STRONG
Nat Neurosci · 2024 · PMID:39251890 · Q:0.60
ABSTRACT

Brain function requires a constant supply of glucose. However, the brain has no known energy stores, except for glycogen granules in astrocytes. In the present study, we report that continuous oligodendroglial lipid metabolism provides an energy reserve in white matter tracts. In the isolated optic nerve from young adult mice of both sexes, oligodendrocytes survive glucose deprivation better than astrocytes. Under low glucose, both axonal ATP levels and action potentials become dependent on fatty acid β-oxidation. Importantly, ongoing oligodendroglial lipid degradation feeds rapidly into white matter energy metabolism. Although not supporting high-frequency spiking, fatty acid β-oxidation in mitochondria and oligodendroglial peroxisomes protects axons from conduction blocks when glucose is limiting. Disruption of the glucose transporter GLUT1 expression in oligodendrocytes of adult mice perturbs myelin homeostasis in vivo and causes gradual demyelination without behavioral signs. This further suggests that the imbalance of myelin synthesis and degradation can underlie myelin thinning in aging and disease.

Metabolism and functions of lipids in myelin STRONG
Biochim Biophys Acta · 2015 · PMID:25542507 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Rapid conduction of nerve impulses requires coating of axons by myelin sheaths, which are lipid-rich and multilamellar membrane stacks. The lipid composition of myelin varies significantly from other biological membranes. Studies in mutant mice targeting various lipid biosynthesis pathways have shown that myelinating glia have a remarkable capacity to compensate the lack of individual lipids. However, compensation fails when it comes to maintaining long-term stability of myelin. Here, we summarize how lipids function in myelin biogenesis, axon-glia communication and in supporting long-term maintenance of myelin. We postulate that change in myelin lipid composition might be relevant for our understanding of aging and demyelinating diseases. This article is part of a Special Issue titled Brain Lipids.

White matter lipid alterations during aging in the rhesus monkey brain STRONG
Geroscience · 2025 · PMID:39312153 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

The brain of higher organisms, such as nonhuman primates, is particularly rich in lipids, with a gray to white matter ratio of approximately 40 to 60%. White matter primarily consists of lipids, and during normal aging, it undergoes significant degeneration due to myelin pathology, which includes structural abnormalities, like sheath splitting, and local inflammation. Cognitive decline in normal aging, without neurodegenerative diseases, is strongly linked to myelin pathology. Although the exact cause of myelin damage is unclear, older myelin differs from younger myelin, as shown by electron microscopy and altered expression of myelin-related RNAs. However, changes in lipid composition during brain aging remain poorly understood. This study assessed lipid profiles from the frontal lobe corpus callosum, an area where age-related myelin pathology is linked to cognitive decline. Results showed significant changes in lipids with age, revealing distinct age-related profiles. Some lipids that are enriched in myelin sheaths become more saturated, while important structural components, like ceramides, decrease. Disease-associated biomarkers such as cholesterol ester Che (22:6) and sulfatide ST (42:2) also change in older monkeys. Additionally, gene expression of lipid biosynthetic enzymes declines with age, while lipid peroxidation remains stable in the same brain region. This suggests that changes in lipid biosynthesis, rather than oxidative damage, likely account for the difference

Differences in the post-stroke innate immune response between young and old STRONG
Semin Immunopathol · 2023 · PMID:37045990 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Aging is associated to progressive changes impairing fundamental cellular and tissue functions, and the relationships amongst them through the vascular and immune systems. Aging factors are key to understanding the pathophysiology of stroke since they increase its risk and worsen its functional outcome. Most currently recognised hallmarks of aging are also involved in the cerebral responses to stroke. Notably, age-associated chronic low-grade inflammation is related to innate immune responses highlighted by induction of type-I interferon. The interferon program is prominent in microglia where it interrelates cell damage, danger signals, and phagocytosis with immunometabolic disturbances and inflammation. Microglia engulfment of damaged myelin and cell debris may overwhelm the cellular capacity for waste removal inducing intracellular lipid accumulation. Acute inflammation and interferon-stimulated gene expression are also typical features of acute stroke, where danger signal recognition by microglia trigger immunometabolic alterations underscored by lipid droplet biogenesis. Aging reduces the capacity to control these responses causing increased and persistent inflammation, metabolic dysregulation, and impaired cellular waste disposal. In turn, chronic peripheral inflammation during aging induces immunosenescence further worsening stroke-induced immunodepression, thus increasing the risk of post-stroke infection. Aging also alters gut microbiota composition inducing dysbiosis

Towards microstructure-informed material models for human brain tissue STRONG
Acta Biomater · 2020 · PMID:31887455 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Emerging evidence suggests that the mechanical behavior of the brain plays a critical role in development, disease, and aging. Recent studies have begun to characterize the mechanical behavior of gray and white matter tissue and to identify sets of material models that best reproduce the stress-strain behavior of different brain regions. Yet, these models are mainly phenomenological in nature, their parameters often lack clear physical interpretation, and they fail to correlate the mechanical behavior to the underlying microstructural composition. Here we make a first attempt towards identifying general relations between microstructure and mechanics with the ultimate goal to develop microstructurally motivated constitutive equations for human brain tissue. Using histological staining, we analyze the microstructure of brain specimens from different anatomical regions, the cortex, basal ganglia, corona radiata, and corpus callosum, and identify the regional stiffness and viscosity under multiple loading conditions, simple shear, compression, and tension. Strikingly, our study reveals a negative correlation between cell count and stiffness, a positive correlation between myelin content and stiffness, and a negative correlation between proteoglycan content and stiffness. Additionally, our analysis shows a positive correlation between lipid and proteoglycan content and viscosity. We demonstrate how understanding the microstructural origin of the macroscopic behavior of the brain c

Metabolic Control of Astrocyte Pathogenic Activity via cPLA2-MAVS STRONG
Cell · 2019 · PMID:31813625 · Q:0.59
ABSTRACT

Metabolism has been shown to control peripheral immunity, but little is known about its role in central nervous system (CNS) inflammation. Through a combination of proteomic, metabolomic, transcriptomic, and perturbation studies, we found that sphingolipid metabolism in astrocytes triggers the interaction of the C2 domain in cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) with the CARD domain in mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS), boosting NF-κB-driven transcriptional programs that promote CNS inflammation in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and, potentially, multiple sclerosis. cPLA2 recruitment to MAVS also disrupts MAVS-hexokinase 2 (HK2) interactions, decreasing HK enzymatic activity and the production of lactate involved in the metabolic support of neurons. Miglustat, a drug used to treat Gaucher and Niemann-Pick disease, suppresses astrocyte pathogenic activities and ameliorates EAE. Collectively, these findings define a novel immunometabolic mechanism that drives pro-inflammatory astrocyte activities, outlines a new role for MAVS in CNS inflammation, and identifies candidate targets for therapeutic intervention.

Anti-type M phospholipase A2 receptor antibody-positive membranous nephropathy as a part of multi-system autoi… STRONG
Anti-type M phospholipase A2 receptor antibody-positive membranous nephropathy as a part of multi-system autoimmune syndrome post-allogeneic stem cell transplantation
Intern Med J · 2018 · PMID:29623981 · Q:0.33
Contactin 1, a Potential New Antigen Target in Membranous Nephropathy: A Case Report STRONG
Am J Kidney Dis · 2022 · PMID:34762973 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Several novel antigens have recently been characterized in membranous nephropathy (MN), but those involved in the rare cases of MN associated with inflammatory neuropathies remain elusive. Although several antibodies have been identified in the serum, there is no evidence so far for their deposition in glomeruli. We report the case of a 73-year-old woman who was referred because of subacute onset of proximal asymmetric lower limb weakness together with ataxic gait. She was diagnosed with inflammatory neuropathy. Testing showed an estimated glomerular filtration rate of 73mL/min/1.73m2, hypoalbuminemia (2.89g/dL), and proteinuria (3.6g/d). Autoantibodies (antinuclear antibody, anti-extractable nuclear antigen antibody, anti-double stranded DNA antibody, lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin antibody, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody) were undetectable. Serum immunoglobulin and complement levels were normal. A kidney biopsy with electron microscopy examination showed a classical picture of MN. Testing for antibodies to phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R) gave negative results in the serum, and PLA2R and THSD7A antigens were not detected in kidney tissue. Anti-contactin 1 (CNTN1) antibody was detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay at a 1:100 dilution of serum and shown to be mostly of IgG4 subclass by Western blot. CNTN1 antigen was colocalized with IgG4 within immune deposits by confocal microscopy. This observation suggests a pathophysiological link between inflammatory

PRDX6 controls multiple sclerosis by suppressing inflammation and blood brain barrier disruption STRONG
Oncotarget · 2015 · PMID:26327204 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a complex disease with an unknown etiology and has no effective medications despite extensive research. Antioxidants suppress oxidative damages which are implicated in the pathogenesis of MS. In this study, we showed that the expression of an antioxidant protein peroxiredoxin 6 (PRDX6) is markedly increased in spinal cord of mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) compared to other PRDXs. PRDX6 transgenic (Tg) mice displayed a significant decrease in clinical severity and attenuated demyelination in EAE compared to wide type mice. The increased PRDX6 expression in astrocytes of EAE mice and MS patients reduced MMP9 expression, fibrinogen leakage, chemokines, and free radical stress, leading to reduction in blood-brain-barrier (BBB) disruption, peripheral immune cell infiltration, and neuroinflammation. Together, these findings suggest that PRDX6 expression may represent a therapeutic way to restrict inflammation in the central nervous system and potentiate oligodendrocyte survival, and suggest a new molecule for neuroprotective therapies in MS.

Rejuvenation Modulation of Nucleus Pulposus Progenitor Cells Reverses Senescence-Associated Intervertebral Dis… STRONG
Rejuvenation Modulation of Nucleus Pulposus Progenitor Cells Reverses Senescence-Associated Intervertebral Disc Degeneration
Adv Mater · 2025 · PMID:39969420 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

The decreased regeneration potential of aging nucleus pulposus resident progenitor cells (NPPCs) fails to resist intervertebral disc degeneration (IVDD), and strategies to remodel the regeneration capacity of senescent NPPC are urgently needed. A decrease in Klotho gene expression in NPPCs of both old mice and humans exacerbates the impaired regenerative functionality of NPPC. Here, an NPPC-targeted lipid thymine nanoparticle (NT-LNP) is reported for the in situ manipulation of the regenerative repair potential of NPPCs, restoration of degenerated nucleus pulposus tissue, and mitigation of IVDD. Specifically, the results showed that the in-house customized lipid nanoparticles efficiently introduced Klotho circular ribonucleic acid (circRNA) into NPPCs to engender a renascent phenotype and tuned the balance of extracellular matrix synthesis/catabolism in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, an intradiscal injectable hydrogel system that scavenges chemokines (MCP1 and IL8) in tandem with NPPCs rejuvenated NT-LNPs in the IVD, modulating the inflammatory environment and synergistically promoting the regeneration of degenerated intervertebral discs. In summary, the findings establish that NPPCs can be re-engineered to be youthful and pluripotent to maintain homeostasis and rejuvenation, thereby providing a reversible treatment strategy for IVDD with broad application in other senescence-related diseases.

Cellular Senescence in Brain Aging STRONG
Front Aging Neurosci · 2021 · PMID:33732142 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Aging of the brain can manifest itself as a memory and cognitive decline, which has been shown to frequently coincide with changes in the structural plasticity of dendritic spines. Decreased number and maturity of spines in aged animals and humans, together with changes in synaptic transmission, may reflect aberrant neuronal plasticity directly associated with impaired brain functions. In extreme, a neurodegenerative disease, which completely devastates the basic functions of the brain, may develop. While cellular senescence in peripheral tissues has recently been linked to aging and a number of aging-related disorders, its involvement in brain aging is just beginning to be explored. However, accumulated evidence suggests that cell senescence may play a role in the aging of the brain, as it has been documented in other organs. Senescent cells stop dividing and shift their activity to strengthen the secretory function, which leads to the acquisition of the so called senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). Senescent cells have also other characteristics, such as altered morphology and proteostasis, decreased propensity to undergo apoptosis, autophagy impairment, accumulation of lipid droplets, increased activity of senescence-associated-β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal), and epigenetic alterations, including DNA methylation, chromatin remodeling, and histone post-translational modifications that, in consequence, result in altered gene expression. Proliferation-competent glia

Modification of the dermal matrix by senescence associated lipids and its functional consequence STRONG
Redox Biol · 2026 · PMID:41690117 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Senescent dermal fibroblasts accumulate and secrete chemically reactive lipids that are components of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). These lipids, including 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE) and reactive oxidized phospholipids (OxPL), covalently bind to and modify proteins via Schiff base formation or Michael adduction. Our study examined lipid-induced collagen modifications and their impact on skin cells to evaluate the long-term consequences of senescent cells on the tissue microenvironment. Using mass spectrometry and biochemical analyses, we identified both high and low molecular-weight modifications to collagen types I, II and IV. Collagen modified by HNE reduced fibroblast proliferation and induced stress responses. In contrast, collagen modified by OxPL provoked inflammatory signaling. Both types of modifications influenced matrix remodeling by increasing proteinase expression while reducing collagen expression. Modified collagen also elevated levels of intracellular reactive oxygen species and lipid peroxidation. Macrophages cultured on modified collagen displayed altered cytokine profiles and Toll-like receptor signaling impairment, that depended on the specific type of lipid modification. Similarly, keratinocytes exposed to modified basal lamina collagen IV showed transient stress responses, increased cytokine expression, and reduced matrix metalloproteinase expression. Furthermore, lipid-modified collagen incorporated into organotypic skin equivalents d

Arachidonic acid analog AACOCF3 suppresses cPLA2-negative NSCLC cell proliferation by targeting SSRP1 to activ…
Arachidonic acid analog AACOCF3 suppresses cPLA2-negative NSCLC cell proliferation by targeting SSRP1 to activate the IFNα/β pathway.
Biochem Pharmacol · 2026 · PMID:41544858 · Q:0.33

Opposing Evidence 8

Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy and PLA2G6-associated neurodegeneration: An update for the diagnosis MEDIUM
Brain Dev · 2017 · PMID:27884548 · Q:0.53
ABSTRACT

Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy is a rare neurodegenerative disorder characterized by infantile onset of rapid motor and cognitive regression and hypotonia evolving into spasticity. Recessively inherited mutations of the PLA2G6 gene are causative of infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy and other PLA2G6-associated neurodegeneration, which includes conditions known as atypical neuroaxonal dystrophy, Karak syndrome and early-onset dystonia-parkinsonism with cognitive impairment. Phenotypic spectrum continues to evolve and genotype-phenotype correlations are currently limited. Due to the overlapping phenotypes and heterogeneity of clinical findings characterization of the syndrome is not always achievable. We reviewed the most recent clinical and neuroradiological information in the way to make easier differential diagnosis with other degenerative disorders in the paediatric age. Recognizing subtle signs and symptoms is a fascinating challenge to drive towards better diagnostic and genetic investigations.

Neuropathology of genetic synucleinopathies with parkinsonism: Review of the literature MEDIUM
Mov Disord · 2017 · PMID:29124790 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Clinical-pathological studies remain the gold-standard for the diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD). However, mounting data from genetic PD autopsies challenge the diagnosis of PD based on Lewy body pathology. Most of the confirmed genetic risks for PD show heterogenous neuropathology, even within kindreds, which may or may not include Lewy body pathology. We review the literature of genetic PD autopsies from cases with molecularly confirmed PD or parkinsonism and summarize main findings on SNCA (n = 25), Parkin (n = 20, 17 bi-allelic and 3 heterozygotes), PINK1 (n = 5, 1 bi-allelic and 4 heterozygotes), DJ-1 (n = 1), LRRK2 (n = 55), GBA (n = 10 Gaucher disease patients with parkinsonism), DNAJC13, GCH1, ATP13A2, PLA2G6 (n = 8 patients, 2 with PD), MPAN (n = 2), FBXO7, RAB39B, and ATXN2 (SCA2), as well as on 22q deletion syndrome (n = 3). Findings from autopsies of heterozygous mutation carriers of genes that are traditionally considered recessively inherited are also discussed. Lewy bodies may be present in syndromes clinically distinctive from PD (eg, MPAN-related neurodegeneration) and absent in patients with clinical PD syndrome (eg, LRRK2-PD or Parkin-PD). Therefore, the authors can conclude that the presence of Lewy bodies are not specific to the diagnosis of PD and that PD can be diagnosed even in the absence of Lewy body pathology. Interventions that reduce alpha-synuclein load may be more justified in SNCA-PD or GBA-PD than in other genetic forms of PD. The number o

Exosomes as nanocarriers for brain-targeted delivery of therapeutic nucleic acids: advances and challenges MEDIUM
J Nanobiotechnology · 2025 · PMID:40533746 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Recent advancements in gene expression modulation and RNA delivery systems have underscored the immense potential of nucleic acid-based therapies (NA-BTs) in biological research. However, the blood-brain barrier (BBB), a crucial regulatory structure that safeguards brain function, presents a significant obstacle to the delivery of drugs to glial cells and neurons. The BBB tightly regulates the movement of substances from the bloodstream into the brain, permitting only small molecules to pass through. This selective permeability poses a significant challenge for effective therapeutic delivery, especially in the case of NA-BTs. Extracellular vesicles, particularly exosomes, are recognized as valuable reservoirs of potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets. They are also gaining significant attention as innovative drug and nucleic acid delivery (NAD) carriers. Their unique ability to safeguard and transport genetic material, inherent biocompatibility, and capacity to traverse physiological barriers highlight their potential as drug carriers. This review provides a comprehensive overview of current strategies to enhance NAD to the brain, focusing on the emerging potential of exosomes as biocompatible and efficient nanocarriers. It synthesizes recent advances in the use of exosomes for NA-BTs in neurological disorders, comparing their advantages with those of conventional nanodelivery systems and cell-based therapies. Additionally, the review highlights innovative exosome engin

Nose-to-Brain Delivery of Circular RNA SCMH1-Loaded Lipid Nanoparticles for Ischemic Stroke Therapy MEDIUM
Adv Mater · 2025 · PMID:40143778 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Ischemic stroke represents one of the leading cerebrovascular diseases with a high rate of mortality and disability globally. To date, there are no effective clinical drugs available to improve long-term outcomes for post-stroke patients. A novel nucleic acid agent circSCMH1 which can promote sensorimotor function recovery in rodent and nonhuman primate animal stroke models has been found. However, there are still delivery challenges to overcome for its clinical implementation. Besides, its effects on post-stroke cognitive functions remain unexplored. Herein, lipid nanoparticle circSCMH1@LNP1 is established to deliver circSCMH1 and explore its therapeutic efficacy comprehensively. Distribution experiments demonstrate that intranasal administration of circSCMH1@LNP1 significantly increases circSCMH1 distribution in the peri-infarct region and reduces its non-specific accumulation in other organs compared to intravenous injection. Therapeutic results indicate that circSCMH1@LNP1 promotes synaptic plasticity, vascular repair, neuroinflammation relief, and myelin sheath formation, thereby achieving enhanced sensorimotor and cognitive function recovery in post-stroke mice. In conclusion, this research presents a simple and effective LNP system for efficient delivery of circSCMH1 via intranasal administration to repair post-stroke brain injury. It is envisioned that this study may bridge a crucial gap between basic research and translational application, paving the way for clinical

Correction of dysregulated lipid metabolism normalizes gene expression in oligodendrocytes and prolongs lifesp… MEDIUM
Correction of dysregulated lipid metabolism normalizes gene expression in oligodendrocytes and prolongs lifespan in female poly-GA C9orf72 mice
Nat Commun · 2025 · PMID:40216746 · Q:0.60
ABSTRACT

Clinical and genetic research links altered cholesterol metabolism with ALS development and progression, yet pinpointing specific pathomechanisms remain challenging. We investigated how cholesterol dysmetabolism interacts with protein aggregation, demyelination, and neuronal loss in ALS. Bulk RNAseq transcriptomics showed decreased cholesterol biosynthesis and increased cholesterol export in ALS mouse models (GA-Nes, GA-Camk2a GA-CFP, rNLS8) and patient samples (spinal cord), suggesting an adaptive response to cholesterol overload. Consequently, we assessed the efficacy of the cholesterol-binding drug 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (CD) in a fast-progressing C9orf72 ALS mouse model with extensive poly-GA expression and myelination deficits. CD treatment normalized cholesteryl ester levels, lowered neurofilament light chain levels, and prolonged lifespan in female but not male GA-Nes mice, without impacting poly-GA aggregates. Single nucleus transcriptomics indicated that CD primarily affected oligodendrocytes, significantly restored myelin gene expression, increased density of myelinated axons, inhibited the disease-associated oligodendrocyte response, and downregulated the lipid-associated genes Plin4 and ApoD. These results suggest that reducing excess free cholesterol in the CNS could be a viable ALS treatment strategy.

Ferroptosis as a potential molecular mechanism of bipolar disorder MEDIUM
Transl Psychiatry · 2025 · PMID:40537482 · Q:0.50
ABSTRACT

The unclear pathogenesis of bipolar disorder (BD) poses a challenge, especially with the striking rates of comorbid medical and psychiatric disorders, treatment resistance, and premature mortality in the absence of a specific diagnostic marker. We put forward the hypothesis of ferroptosis, a recently identified iron-dependent cell death, as a potential underlying mechanism of BD. We aimed to portray the possibility of ferroptosis involvement in BD pathogenesis as a doorway to encourage both animal and clinical studies on the topic. Ferroptosis is associated with multiple psychiatric disorders, including major depressive disorder, stress-induced anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, autism spectrum disorder, and alcohol use disorder. In addition, ferroptosis-related genes have been identified in schizophrenia, which shares genetic liabilities with BD. One of the top five most significant genes in BD in a recent genome-wide association study, FADS 2, is involved in ferroptosis. The three hallmarks of ferroptosis intersect with the pathogenesis of BD, including iron dysregulation, lipid peroxidation, and the failure of antioxidant systems. Other pieces of BD pathogenesis, including inflammation, mitochondrial dysfunction, calcium dysregulation, neurotransmission disturbance, and affection of synaptic plasticity and myelination, are either a preface or an aftermath of iron dysregulation. Additionally, circadian rhythm abnormalities and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis distu

Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation MEDIUM
Handb Clin Neurol · 2018 · PMID:29325618 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) comprises a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders affecting children and adults. These rare disorders are often first suspected when increased basal ganglia iron is observed on brain magnetic resonance imaging. For the majority of NBIA disorders the genetic basis has been delineated, and clinical testing is available. The four most common NBIA disorders include pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration (PKAN) due to mutations in PANK2, phospholipase A2-associated neurodegeneration caused by mutation in PLA2G6, mitochondrial membrane protein-associated neurodegeneration from mutations in C19orf12, and beta-propeller protein-associated neurodegeneration due to mutations in WDR45. The ultrarare NBIA disorders are caused by mutations in CoASY, ATP13A2, and FA2H (causing CoA synthase protein-associated neurodegeneration, Kufor-Rakeb disease, and fatty acid hydroxylase-associated neurodegeneration, respectively). Together, these genes account for disease in approximately 85% of patients diagnosed with an NBIA disorder. New NBIA genes are being recognized with increasing frequency as a result of whole-exome sequencing, which is also facilitating early ascertainment of patients whose phenotype is often nonspecific.

Neuroaxonal dystrophy in PLA2G6 knockout mice MEDIUM
Neuropathology · 2015 · PMID:25950622 · Q:0.33
ABSTRACT

The PLA2G6 gene encodes group VIA calcium-independent phospholipase A2 (iPLA2 β), which belongs to the PLA2 superfamily that hydrolyses the sn-2 ester bond in phospholipids. In the nervous system, iPLA2 β is essential for remodeling membrane phospholipids in axons and synapses. Mutated PLA2G6 causes PLA2G6-associated neurodegeneration (PLAN) including infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) and adult-onset dystonia-parkinsonism (PARK14), which have unique clinical phenotypes. In the PLA2G6 knockout (KO) mouse, which is an excellent PLAN model, specific membrane degeneration takes place in neurons and their axons, and this is followed by axonal spheroid formation. These pathological findings are similar to those in PLAN. This review details the evidence that membrane degeneration of mitochondria and axon terminals is a precursor to spheroid formation in this disease model. From a young age before the onset, many mitochondria with damaged inner membranes appear in PLA2G6 KO mouse neurons. These injured mitochondria move anterogradely within the axons, increasing in the distal axons. As membrane degeneration progresses, the collapse of the double membrane of mitochondria accompanies axonal injury near impaired mitochondria. At the axon terminals, the membranes of the presynapses expand irregularly from a young age. Over time, the presynaptic membrane ruptures, causing axon terminal degeneration. Although these processes occur in different degenerating membranes, both contain tubu

Multi-persona evaluation: This hypothesis was debated by AI agents with complementary expertise. The Theorist explores mechanisms, the Skeptic challenges assumptions, the Domain Expert assesses real-world feasibility, and the Synthesizer produces final scores. Expand each card to see their arguments.
Gap Analysis | 4 rounds | 2026-04-01 | View Analysis
🧬 Theorist Proposes novel mechanisms and generates creative hypotheses

1. Senescence-Activated NAD+ Depletion Rescue

Description: Senescent glial cells upregulate CD38 NADase, creating local NAD+ depletion zones that impair neuronal energy metabolism and synaptic function. Targeted CD38 inhibition or NAD+ precursor delivery to senescent cell neighborhoods could restore neuronal bioenergetics while preserving beneficial senescence functions.

Target: CD38 NADase/NAMPT pathway

Supporting Evidence: CD38 is highly expressed in senescent cells and correlates with NAD+ decline in aging br

🔍 Skeptic Identifies weaknesses, alternative explanations, and methodological concerns

1. Senescence-Activated NAD+ Depletion Rescue

Specific Weaknesses:

  • Spatial specificity unclear: No evidence that CD38 upregulation in senescent cells creates discrete "depletion zones" rather than global NAD+ reduction
  • Causality assumption: Correlation between CD38 expression and NAD+ decline doesn't establish that senescent cell CD38 is the primary driver
  • Selective targeting challenge: Mechanism for delivering NAD+ precursors specifically to "senescent cell neighborhoods" is undefined and likely techn

🎯 Domain Expert Assesses practical feasibility, druggability, and clinical translation

1. Senescence-Activated NAD+ Depletion Rescue

Revised Confidence: 0.45

Druggability: HIGH

CD38 Inhibitors:
  • 78c: Potent, selective CD38 inhibitor (IC50 = 40 nM), brain-penetrant
  • Kuromanin: Natural flavonoid CD38 inhibitor, oral bioavailability
  • Apigenin: Dual CD38/CD157 inhibitor, clinical safety data available
NAD+ Precursors:
  • Nicotinamide riboside (NR): ChromaDex's NIAGEN®, FDA GRAS status
  • Nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN): Multiple suppliers, ongoing trials
  • NAD+: Dir

Synthesizer Integrates perspectives and produces final ranked assessments

Price History

0.250.500.75 created: post_process (2026-04-02T01:34)score_update: post_process (2026-04-02T03:15)score_update: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T04:09)debate: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T04:30)score_update: post_process (2026-04-02T04:55)score_update: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T05:03)evidence: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T05:18)score_update: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T05:48)debate: debate_engine (2026-04-02T06:36)debate: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T06:40)debate: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T07:13)evidence: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T07:16)debate: debate_engine (2026-04-02T08:16)score_update: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T09:56)evidence: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T11:19)debate: debate_engine (2026-04-02T11:37)score_update: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T13:17)evidence: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T17:18)evidence: market_dynamics_seed (2026-04-02T18:16)evidence: evidence_batch_update (2026-04-04T09:08)evidence: evidence_batch_update (2026-04-13T02:18)evidence: evidence_batch_update (2026-04-13T02:18) 1.00 0.00 2026-04-022026-04-122026-04-27 Market PriceScoreevidencedebate 190 events
7d Trend
Falling
7d Momentum
▼ 3.9%
Volatility
Medium
0.0290
Events (7d)
8
⚡ Price Movement Log Recent 15 events
Event Price Change Source Time
📄 New Evidence $0.526 ▲ 1.8% evidence_batch_update 2026-04-13 02:18
📄 New Evidence $0.517 ▲ 1.1% evidence_batch_update 2026-04-13 02:18
Recalibrated $0.511 ▼ 2.3% 2026-04-12 05:13
Recalibrated $0.523 ▼ 0.5% 2026-04-10 15:58
Recalibrated $0.526 ▲ 0.6% 2026-04-10 15:53
Recalibrated $0.523 ▼ 6.1% 2026-04-08 18:39
Recalibrated $0.556 ▲ 5.5% 2026-04-06 04:04
Recalibrated $0.527 ▼ 0.5% 2026-04-04 16:38
Recalibrated $0.530 ▲ 0.3% 2026-04-04 16:02
📄 New Evidence $0.528 ▲ 2.0% evidence_batch_update 2026-04-04 09:08
Recalibrated $0.518 ▼ 0.6% 2026-04-04 01:39
Recalibrated $0.521 ▼ 5.7% 2026-04-03 23:46
Recalibrated $0.553 ▲ 8.6% 2026-04-02 21:55
Recalibrated $0.509 ▼ 4.6% market_recalibrate 2026-04-02 19:14
📄 New Evidence $0.534 ▼ 1.4% market_dynamics_seed 2026-04-02 18:16

Clinical Trials (4) Relevance: 44%

0
Active
0
Completed
308
Total Enrolled
PHASE1
Highest Phase
Senolytic Therapy to Modulate the Progression of Alzheimer's Disease (SToMP-AD) Study PHASE2
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING · NCT04685590 · Washington University School of Medicine
48 enrolled · 2021-12-22 · → 2028-01
Dasatinib + Quercetin senolytics directly target p16Ink4a/p21Cip1 senescent cells including senescent oligodendrocytes. Since myelin lipid remodeling is driven by senescent PLA2G6/PLA2G4A-overexpressi
Alzheimer Disease Mild Cognitive Impairment
Dasatinib + Quercetin Placebo Capsules
Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of GSK2647544 PHASE1
COMPLETED · NCT01702467 · GlaxoSmithKline
72 enrolled · 2012-10-01 · → 2014-06-30
GSK2647544 is a selective lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (LpPLA2) inhibitor. LpPLA2 produces pro-inflammatory lipid mediators from oxidized phospholipids in myelin membranes. Directly relevan
Alzheimer Disease
GSK2647544 (LpPLA2 inhibitor) Placebo
GSK2647544 Repeat Dose DDI in Healthy Young and Elderly Volunteers PHASE1
TERMINATED · NCT01978327 · GlaxoSmithKline
48 enrolled · 2014-01-01 · → 2015-12-31
Repeat-dose safety and pharmacodynamics study of LpPLA2 inhibitor GSK2647544 in elderly volunteers. Though terminated, provides Phase 1 safety data for PLA2 inhibition in the target population. Suppor
Alzheimer Disease
GSK2647544
Activity of Cerebral Networks, Amyloid and Microglia in Aging and Alzheimer's Disease Unknown
COMPLETED · NCT06224920 · Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich
140 enrolled · 2017-01-01 · → 2024-01-01
Studies microglial activation and myelin integrity in aging and AD. Oligodendrocyte senescence leads to myelin debris accumulation and defective lipid remodeling. This imaging study provides reference
Alzheimer Disease Corticobasal Syndrome
MRI EEG

📚 Cited Papers (61)

Neuropathology of genetic synucleinopathies with parkinsonism: Review of the literature.
Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society (2017) · PMID:29124790
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation.
Handbook of clinical neurology (2018) · PMID:29325618
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
Ferroptosis of Microglia in Aging Human White Matter Injury.
Annals of neurology (2023) · PMID:37605362
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
Neuroaxonal dystrophy in PLA2G6 knockout mice.
Neuropathology : official journal of the Japanese Society of Neuropathology (2015) · PMID:25950622
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
7 figures
Figure 1
Figure 1
Prostaglandin E 2 production by BEND cells . Cell culture medium was harvested 6 h after addition of treatments and concentrations of PGE 2 were analyzed by ELISA. Treatments inc...
pmc_api
Figure 2
Figure 2
Prostaglandin F 2α production by BEND cells . Cell culture medium was harvested 6 h after addition of treatments and concentrations of PGF 2α were analyzed by ELISA. Treatments i...
pmc_api
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
3 figures
Fig. 1
Fig. 1
The structure of the neurovascular section. The neurovascular unit (NVU) comprises neurons, glial cells (astrocytes, microglia, oligodendrocytes), and vascular cells (endothelial c...
pmc_api
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Summary of nanoparticle-based systems, non-invasive approaches, and targeted delivery (TD) in the brain. A The image illustrates seven key methods for overcoming the blood–brain ...
pmc_api
No extracted figures yet
No extracted figures yet
No extracted figures yet
No extracted figures yet

📅 Citation Freshness Audit

Freshness score = exp(-age×ln2/5): halves every 5 years. Green >0.6, Amber 0.3–0.6, Red <0.3.

No citation freshness data yet. Export bibliography — run scripts/audit_citation_freshness.py to populate.

⚔ Arena Performance

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📊 Resource Economics & ROI

High Efficiency Resource Efficiency Score
0.91
75.8th percentile (776 hypotheses)
Tokens Used
5,576
KG Edges Generated
19
Citations Produced
38

Cost Ratios

Cost per KG Edge
16.40 tokens
Lower is better (baseline: 2000)
Cost per Citation
179.87 tokens
Lower is better (baseline: 1000)
Cost per Score Point
8046.18 tokens
Tokens / composite_score

Score Impact

Efficiency Boost to Composite
+0.091
10% weight of efficiency score
Adjusted Composite
0.822

How Economics Pricing Works

Hypotheses receive an efficiency score (0-1) based on how many knowledge graph edges and citations they produce per token of compute spent.

High-efficiency hypotheses (score >= 0.8) get a price premium in the market, pulling their price toward $0.580.

Low-efficiency hypotheses (score < 0.6) receive a discount, pulling their price toward $0.420.

Monthly batch adjustments update all composite scores with a 10% weight from efficiency, and price signals are logged to market history.

Efficiency Price Signals

Date Signal Price Score
2026-04-17T09:10$0.6420.567

📋 Reviews View all →

Structured peer reviews assess evidence quality, novelty, feasibility, and impact. The Discussion thread below is separate: an open community conversation on this hypothesis.

💬 Discussion

No DepMap CRISPR Chronos data found for PLA2G6/PLA2G4A.

Run python3 scripts/backfill_hypothesis_depmap.py to populate.

No curated ClinVar variants loaded for this hypothesis.

Run scripts/backfill_clinvar_variants.py to fetch P/LP/VUS variants.

🔍 Search ClinVar for PLA2G6/PLA2G4A →

Wiki Pages

Age-Sensitive Cortical Vulnerability in Parkinson'mechanismPLA2G6 — Phospholipase A2 Group VIgenePLA2G6 Protein (iPLA2-VI)proteinSynaptic Biomarkers in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerNeuroimaging Biomarkers for NeurodegenerationbiomarkerMDS 2026 — Fluid Biomarker Advances in NeurodegeneeventExosomal miR-155 in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerCSF Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL) in NeurodegenebiomarkerDNA Methylation Biomarkers in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerExosomal Biomarkers in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerMetabolomic Biomarkers in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerIL-6 (Interleukin-6) in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerLiquid Biopsy in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerCell-Free DNA Biomarkers in NeurodegenerationbiomarkerBlood-Based Biomarkers for Neurodegenerationbiomarker

KG Entities (68)

APPAQP4C1QC1Q/C3C1q / complement-mediated synapse eliminC3C4C5CD38CD38/NAMPTCGASCGAS/STING1/DNASE2CLUCR1CX3CR1CXCL10Cellular senescence / SASP signalingDNASE2GPX4GPX4/SLC7A11

Linked Experiments (5)

Oligodendrocyte-Myelin Dysfunction Validation in Parkinson's Diseaseclinical | tests | 0.40Iron Dyshomeostasis in MSA Pathogenesis Experimentvalidation | tests | 0.40Senolytic Therapy (D+Q) Phase IIa Trial in Early Alzheimer's Diseaseclinical | tests | 0.40Proposed experiment from debate on Microglia activate astrocytes via IL-1alpha/Tfalsification | tests | 0.40Proposed experiment from debate on Senolytics targeting p16/p21+ senescent astrofalsification | tests | 0.40

Related Hypotheses

TREM2-Mediated Senescent Microglial Reprogramming of Astrocyte Networks
Score: 0.000 | neurodegeneration
TREM2-Dependent Astrocyte-Microglia Cross-talk in Neuroinflammation
Score: 0.000 | neurodegeneration
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation-Induced Nanoparticle Delivery via Neuronal Activity Modulation
Score: 0.000 | neurodegeneration
CYP46A1 Inhibition Therapy for Neurodegeneration
Score: 0.000 | neurodegeneration
TREM2-Mediated Oligodendrocyte Metabolic Support in White Matter Neurodegeneration
Score: 0.000 | neurodegeneration

Estimated Development

Estimated Cost
$0
Timeline
2.5 years

🧪 Falsifiable Predictions (3)

3 total 0 confirmed 0 falsified
If hypothesis is true, intervention be expected from symptomatic treatments alone
pending conf: 0.30
Expected outcome: be expected from symptomatic treatments alone
Falsified by: Intervention fails to be expected from symptomatic treatments alone
If hypothesis is true, intervention provide sustained CNS exposure while minimizing systemic toxicity
pending conf: 0.30
Expected outcome: provide sustained CNS exposure while minimizing systemic toxicity
Falsified by: Intervention fails to provide sustained CNS exposure while minimizing systemic toxicity
If hypothesis is true, intervention deliver PLA2 inhibitory sequences or lipid biosynthesis enhancing factors directly to affected cells
pending conf: 0.30
Expected outcome: deliver PLA2 inhibitory sequences or lipid biosynthesis enhancing factors directly to affected cells
Falsified by: Intervention fails to deliver PLA2 inhibitory sequences or lipid biosynthesis enhancing factors directly to affected cells

Knowledge Subgraph (200 edges)

associated with (6)

C1QneurodegenerationC3neurodegenerationCD38neurodegenerationCGASneurodegenerationGPX4neurodegeneration
▸ Show 1 more

co discussed (166)

MMP9SLC7A11MMP9AQP4MMP9CD38MMP9C1QMMP9NAMPT
▸ Show 161 more
MMP9GPX4MMP9PLA2G6MMP9MMP2MMP9C3MMP9PLA2G4ASLC7A11AQP4SLC7A11CD38SLC7A11C1QSLC7A11NAMPTSLC7A11GPX4SLC7A11PLA2G6SLC7A11MMP2SLC7A11C3SLC7A11PLA2G4AAQP4CD38AQP4C1QAQP4NAMPTAQP4GPX4AQP4PLA2G6AQP4MMP2AQP4C3AQP4PLA2G4ACD38C1QCD38GPX4CD38PLA2G6CD38MMP2CD38C3CD38PLA2G4AC1QNAMPTC1QGPX4C1QPLA2G6C1QMMP2C1QC3C1QPLA2G4ANAMPTGPX4NAMPTPLA2G6NAMPTMMP2NAMPTC3NAMPTPLA2G4AGPX4PLA2G6GPX4MMP2GPX4C3GPX4PLA2G4APLA2G6MMP2PLA2G6C3PLA2G6PLA2G4AMMP2C3MMP2PLA2G4AC3PLA2G4AMMP9CGASMMP9IL1BMMP9DNASE2MMP9STING1SLC7A11CGASSLC7A11IL1BSLC7A11DNASE2SLC7A11STING1CGASAQP4CGASCD38CGASC1QCGASNAMPTCGASGPX4CGASPLA2G6CGASIL1BCGASMMP2CGASDNASE2CGASC3CGASPLA2G4AAQP4IL1BAQP4DNASE2AQP4STING1CD38IL1BCD38DNASE2CD38STING1C1QIL1BC1QDNASE2C1QSTING1NAMPTIL1BNAMPTDNASE2NAMPTSTING1GPX4IL1BGPX4DNASE2GPX4STING1PLA2G6IL1BPLA2G6DNASE2PLA2G6STING1IL1BMMP2IL1BDNASE2IL1BSTING1IL1BC3IL1BPLA2G4AMMP2DNASE2MMP2STING1DNASE2STING1DNASE2C3DNASE2PLA2G4ASTING1C3STING1PLA2G4AC1QC4C3C4C4TNFC1QC5C1QCR1C3CR1C5CR1CX3CR1LC3CX3CR1RAB5CX3CR1RAB7LC3RAB5LC3RAB7RAB5RAB7APPC1QAPPC3APPC4C1QCLUC3CLUC4CLUC4CR1C4TAUCLUTAUCR1TAUAPPCD38NAMPTTAUCX3CR1TIMP1IRF3TBK1CXCL10TNFAPPCGASP38PLA2G4APLA2G6AQP4PLA2G6CD38PLA2G6NAMPTPLA2G6GPX4PLA2G6C1QPLA2G6SLC7A11PLA2G6MMP9C3AQP4C3CD38C3NAMPTC3GPX4C3C1QC3SLC7A11C3MMP2C3MMP9PLA2G4AAQP4PLA2G4ACD38PLA2G4ANAMPTPLA2G4AGPX4PLA2G4AC1QPLA2G4ASLC7A11PLA2G4AMMP2PLA2G4AMMP9AQP4SLC7A11AQP4MMP9CD38SLC7A11CD38MMP9NAMPTC1QNAMPTSLC7A11NAMPTMMP9GPX4C1QGPX4MMP9C1QSLC7A11

interacts with (15)

C1QC3C3C1QCD38NAMPTNAMPTCD38MMP2MMP9
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participates in (13)

C1QC1q / complement-mediated synapse eliminationC3C1q / complement-mediated synapse eliminationCD38Cellular senescence / SASP signalingNAMPTCellular senescence / SASP signalingMMP2Synaptic function / plasticity
▸ Show 8 more

Mechanism Pathway for PLA2G6/PLA2G4A

Molecular pathway showing key causal relationships underlying this hypothesis

graph TD
    CGAS["CGAS"] -->|associated with| neurodegeneration["neurodegeneration"]
    GPX4["GPX4"] -->|associated with| neurodegeneration_1["neurodegeneration"]
    PLA2G6["PLA2G6"] -->|associated with| neurodegeneration_2["neurodegeneration"]
    C1Q["C1Q"] -->|participates in| C1q___complement_mediated["C1q / complement-mediated synapse elimination"]
    C3["C3"] -->|participates in| C1q___complement_mediated_3["C1q / complement-mediated synapse elimination"]
    C1Q_4["C1Q"] -->|associated with| neurodegeneration_5["neurodegeneration"]
    C1Q_6["C1Q"] -->|interacts with| C3_7["C3"]
    C3_8["C3"] -->|associated with| neurodegeneration_9["neurodegeneration"]
    C3_10["C3"] -->|interacts with| C1Q_11["C1Q"]
    CD38["CD38"] -->|associated with| neurodegeneration_12["neurodegeneration"]
    CD38_13["CD38"] -->|interacts with| NAMPT["NAMPT"]
    NAMPT_14["NAMPT"] -->|interacts with| CD38_15["CD38"]
    style CGAS fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GPX4 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration_1 fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style PLA2G6 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration_2 fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C1Q fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C1q___complement_mediated fill:#81c784,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C3 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C1q___complement_mediated_3 fill:#81c784,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C1Q_4 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration_5 fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C1Q_6 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C3_7 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C3_8 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration_9 fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C3_10 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style C1Q_11 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style CD38 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration_12 fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style CD38_13 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style NAMPT fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style NAMPT_14 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style CD38_15 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000

3D Protein Structure

🧬 PLA2G6 — PDB 2N3W Click to expand 3D viewer

Experimental structure from RCSB PDB | Powered by Mol* | Rotate: click+drag | Zoom: scroll | Reset: right-click

Source Analysis

Senolytic therapy for age-related neurodegeneration

neurodegeneration | 2026-04-01 | completed

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Same Analysis (5)

SASP-Mediated Complement Cascade Amplification
Score: 0.98 · C1Q/C3
SASP-Driven Aquaporin-4 Dysregulation
Score: 0.78 · AQP4
SASP-Mediated Cholinergic Synapse Disruption
Score: 0.76 · MMP2/MMP9
Senescence-Activated NAD+ Depletion Rescue
Score: 0.76 · CD38/NAMPT
Senescent Cell Mitochondrial DNA Release
Score: 0.74 · CGAS/STING1/DNASE2
→ View all analysis hypotheses