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Metabolic Circuit Breaker via Lipid Droplet Modulation
🧪 Overview
Mechanistic Overview
Metabolic Circuit Breaker via Lipid Droplet Modulation starts from the claim that modulating PLIN2 within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "## Molecular Mechanism and Rationale The molecular foundation of this therapeutic strategy centers on perilipin-2 (PLIN2), a member of the perilipin family of lipid droplet coat proteins that orchestrates the dynamic interface between lipid storage and cellular metabolism. PLIN2 functions as a critical gatekeeper controlling the accessibility of stored triacylglycerols and cholesteryl esters within cytoplasmic lipid droplets. Under physiological conditions, PLIN2 coating prevents premature lipolysis by blocking the access of cytosolic lipases, including adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) and hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL), to the lipid droplet core. This regulatory mechanism becomes particularly crucial in the central nervous system, where astrocytes serve as the primary lipid storage cells and metabolic support system for neighboring neurons and microglia....
Mechanistic Overview
Metabolic Circuit Breaker via Lipid Droplet Modulation starts from the claim that modulating PLIN2 within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "## Molecular Mechanism and Rationale The molecular foundation of this therapeutic strategy centers on perilipin-2 (PLIN2), a member of the perilipin family of lipid droplet coat proteins that orchestrates the dynamic interface between lipid storage and cellular metabolism. PLIN2 functions as a critical gatekeeper controlling the accessibility of stored triacylglycerols and cholesteryl esters within cytoplasmic lipid droplets. Under physiological conditions, PLIN2 coating prevents premature lipolysis by blocking the access of cytosolic lipases, including adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) and hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL), to the lipid droplet core. This regulatory mechanism becomes particularly crucial in the central nervous system, where astrocytes serve as the primary lipid storage cells and metabolic support system for neighboring neurons and microglia. The mechanistic rationale for targeting PLIN2 emerges from recent discoveries regarding lipid droplet-mitochondrial contact sites and their role in cellular metabolism. PLIN2-coated lipid droplets establish dynamic tethering relationships with mitochondria through protein complexes involving mitofusin-2 (MFN2), voltage-dependent anion channel 1 (VDAC1), and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha (PGC-1α). These contact sites facilitate the controlled release of fatty acids for β-oxidation while maintaining metabolic homeostasis. In astrocytes, enhanced PLIN2 expression promotes lipid droplet biogenesis and stability, effectively sequestering fatty acid substrates that would otherwise be available for microglial uptake and utilization. The pathological activation of microglia in neurodegenerative diseases relies heavily on metabolic reprogramming toward enhanced oxidative phosphorylation and fatty acid oxidation. Activated microglia upregulate key enzymes in fatty acid metabolism, including carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1A (CPT1A), acyl-CoA synthetase long chain family member 1 (ACSL1), and components of the electron transport chain. This metabolic shift supports the energy-intensive processes of inflammatory cytokine production, including tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β), and interleukin-6 (IL-6), as well as the generation of reactive oxygen species through NADPH oxidase activation. By enhancing astrocytic PLIN2 expression and lipid droplet accumulation, this therapeutic approach creates a metabolic sink that depletes the local fatty acid pool, effectively disrupting the fuel supply necessary for sustained microglial activation.
Preclinical Evidence Compelling preclinical evidence supporting this metabolic circuit breaker hypothesis has emerged from multiple experimental model systems. In the 5xFAD mouse model of Alzheimer's disease, genetic manipulation of astrocytic PLIN2 expression through adeno-associated virus (AAV) delivery resulted in a 45-55% reduction in microglial activation markers, including ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1 (Iba1) and CD68, compared to control animals at 6 months of age. Quantitative analysis using flow cytometry revealed that PLIN2 overexpression in astrocytes led to a significant shift in microglial phenotype from the pro-inflammatory M1 state (characterized by high expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase and IL-1β) to the alternative M2 state (marked by arginase-1 and IL-10 expression), with a 60% increase in M2/M1 ratio. In vitro studies using primary astrocyte-microglia co-cultures from C57BL/6 mice have demonstrated the cell-autonomous effects of PLIN2 modulation on lipid metabolism. Treatment of astrocytes with oleic acid to induce lipid droplet formation, combined with PLIN2 overexpression via lentiviral transduction, resulted in a 70% increase in intracellular lipid droplet number and a corresponding 40% reduction in extracellular free fatty acid concentrations measured by colorimetric assay. When these conditioned media were applied to lipopolysaccharide-stimulated microglia, inflammatory cytokine production was reduced by 35-50% compared to control conditions, with the most pronounced effects observed for TNF-α and IL-6. Complementary studies in Caenorhabditis elegans models of neurodegeneration have provided insights into the evolutionary conservation of this metabolic pathway. Transgenic worms expressing human amyloid-beta in neurons showed improved survival and reduced neuronal loss when PLIN2 homologs were overexpressed in glial cells. Lipidomic analysis revealed significant alterations in fatty acid profiles, with increased storage of palmitic acid and oleic acid in glial lipid droplets and corresponding reductions in neuroinflammatory markers measured through quantitative PCR. The SOD1-G93A mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis has further validated the therapeutic potential of PLIN2 modulation. Intrathecal delivery of PLIN2-expressing AAV vectors at 60 days of age resulted in delayed disease onset by approximately 2-3 weeks and extended survival by 15-20 days compared to vehicle-treated controls. Histopathological analysis revealed preserved motor neuron counts in the lumbar spinal cord, with a 30% reduction in microglial density and decreased expression of pro-inflammatory mediators including complement component 3 (C3) and major histocompatibility complex II (MHC-II).
Therapeutic Strategy and Delivery The therapeutic implementation of PLIN2 modulation requires a sophisticated delivery strategy that achieves astrocyte-specific targeting while maintaining sufficient duration of action for disease modification. The primary therapeutic modality centers on adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy, specifically utilizing AAV serotype 9 (AAV9) vectors engineered with the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) promoter to ensure astrocyte-selective expression. This approach leverages the natural tropism of AAV9 for central nervous system tissues and the specificity of the GFAP promoter for astrocytic cells, minimizing off-target effects in other brain cell populations. The vector design incorporates a codon-optimized PLIN2 coding sequence under the control of a modified GFAP promoter (gfaABC1D) that provides enhanced specificity and expression levels compared to the native promoter. Additionally, the construct includes a woodchuck hepatitis virus post-transcriptional regulatory element (WPRE) to improve mRNA stability and translation efficiency. For enhanced monitoring of therapeutic efficacy, a separate vector encoding a fluorescent reporter protein linked to PLIN2 expression through a 2A self-cleaving peptide sequence enables real-time assessment of transduction efficiency and protein expression levels. Delivery route selection prioritizes direct central nervous system access through intracerebroventricular (ICV) injection or targeted intraparenchymal delivery to specific brain regions. For Alzheimer's disease applications, bilateral hippocampal injections (2-4 injection sites per hemisphere) deliver 2×10^12 vector genomes per site, achieving widespread transduction throughout the hippocampal formation and associated limbic structures. The injection coordinates are precisely determined using stereotactic guidance with coordinates relative to bregma: anteroposterior -2.0 to -3.0 mm, mediolateral ±1.5 to 2.5 mm, and dorsoventral -1.5 to -2.5 mm. Pharmacokinetic considerations for AAV-mediated gene therapy focus on the time course of transgene expression and duration of therapeutic effect. Peak PLIN2 protein expression typically occurs 2-4 weeks post-injection, with sustained expression maintained for at least 12-18 months in non-human primate studies. The therapeutic window requires careful consideration of disease stage, with optimal intervention occurring during early-to-moderate phases of neurodegeneration when substantial astrocytic populations remain viable for transduction. Alternative therapeutic approaches include small molecule modulators of PLIN2 expression and function. High-throughput screening has identified several compounds that enhance PLIN2 stability and lipid droplet formation, including specific inhibitors of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway that prevent PLIN2 degradation. These small molecules offer advantages in terms of reversibility, dose titration, and potential for combination therapies, though they may lack the cell-type specificity achieved through gene therapy approaches.
Evidence for Disease Modification The differentiation between symptomatic treatment and disease modification represents a critical aspect of validating the PLIN2 therapeutic strategy. Multiple biomarker categories provide evidence for genuine disease-modifying effects rather than transient symptomatic improvements. Neuroimaging biomarkers demonstrate structural preservation and functional improvements that persist beyond the immediate treatment period. In 5xFAD mice treated with PLIN2 gene therapy, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) volumetric analysis revealed preservation of hippocampal volume at 9 months of age, with treated animals showing only 15% volume loss compared to 40% loss in untreated controls. Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging using [18F]DPA-714, a translocator protein (TSPO) ligand that binds specifically to activated microglia, provides quantitative assessment of neuroinflammation levels. Longitudinal PET studies in PLIN2-treated animals demonstrated sustained reductions in TSPO binding potential of 35-45% in targeted brain regions, with effects maintained for at least 6 months post-treatment. This contrasts with anti-inflammatory drugs that show rapid normalization of binding upon treatment discontinuation. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers offer additional evidence for disease modification through direct measurement of pathological processes. In the SOD1-G93A ALS model, PLIN2 treatment resulted in sustained reductions in CSF levels of neurofilament light chain (NfL), a marker of axonal damage, with concentrations remaining 50% lower than controls throughout the disease progression. Similarly, CSF levels of chitinase-3-like protein 1 (CHI3L1), an astrocytic activation marker, were reduced by 30-40% in treated animals, suggesting modulation of astrocytic inflammatory responses. The most compelling evidence for disease modification comes from functional outcomes that demonstrate preserved cellular and circuit-level function. Electrophysiological recordings from hippocampal slices of PLIN2-treated 5xFAD mice revealed preservation of long-term potentiation (LTP) amplitude and duration, with synaptic plasticity measures indistinguishable from age-matched wild-type controls. In contrast, untreated 5xFAD mice showed 60-70% reductions in LTP magnitude and accelerated decay kinetics. Behavioral assessments provide translational relevance for cognitive and motor function preservation. In the Morris water maze, PLIN2-treated animals maintained spatial learning and memory capabilities comparable to healthy controls, with escape latencies and probe trial performance showing minimal deterioration over 6-month follow-up periods. The sustainability of these effects, particularly when treatment is initiated during early disease stages, strongly suggests modification of underlying pathological processes rather than temporary symptomatic relief.
Clinical Translation Considerations The translation of PLIN2-targeted therapy to human clinical applications requires careful consideration of patient selection, trial design, and safety parameters. Patient stratification strategies prioritize individuals with early-stage neurodegenerative diseases who retain sufficient astrocytic populations for effective gene therapy transduction. For Alzheimer's disease, ideal candidates include those with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or early-stage dementia (MMSE scores 18-26) and positive amyloid PET scans or CSF biomarkers indicating underlying Alzheimer's pathology. Genetic stratification may identify patients with specific apolipoprotein E (APOE) variants who show enhanced responses to metabolic interventions. The regulatory pathway follows established precedents for AAV gene therapies targeting the central nervous system, requiring extensive preclinical safety testing in non-human primates and comprehensive manufacturing under current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP) conditions. The FDA's guidance for gene therapy products necessitates detailed characterization of vector biodistribution, integration potential, and immunogenicity profiles. Given the recent approvals of CNS-directed AAV therapies for spinal muscular atrophy (Zolgensma) and inherited retinal diseases, regulatory pathways are increasingly well-defined. Phase I clinical trial design emphasizes safety and dose-escalation protocols with careful monitoring for potential adverse events including immune responses to the AAV vector, surgical complications from stereotactic delivery, and potential off-target effects. The trial incorporates comprehensive biomarker monitoring including CSF sampling, neuroimaging assessments, and detailed neuropsychological evaluations to establish preliminary efficacy signals while ensuring patient safety. Competitive landscape analysis reveals limited direct competition for PLIN2-targeted approaches, though several metabolic interventions for neurodegeneration are in development. The closest competitors include other metabolic modulators such as ketogenic therapies and mitochondrial enhancers, though none specifically target the astrocyte-microglia metabolic interaction pathway proposed here. This represents both an opportunity for differentiation and a challenge in establishing proof-of-concept without extensive prior clinical validation of similar approaches. Manufacturing considerations for AAV gene therapy require specialized facilities and quality control measures to ensure vector purity, potency, and safety. Partnership with established gene therapy manufacturing organizations or development of dedicated production capabilities represents a significant investment requirement for clinical development.
Future Directions and Combination Approaches The future development of PLIN2-targeted therapy encompasses multiple complementary research directions and combination strategies that could enhance therapeutic efficacy and broaden clinical applications. Advanced vector engineering approaches aim to improve the specificity and efficiency of astrocytic targeting through novel promoter systems and capsid modifications. Development of inducible expression systems would enable temporal control over PLIN2 levels, allowing for personalized dosing strategies and potential reversibility if adverse effects occur. Combination therapeutic strategies represent particularly promising avenues for enhancing disease modification. The integration of PLIN2 therapy with established treatments such as cholinesterase inhibitors for Alzheimer's disease or riluzole for ALS could provide synergistic benefits through complementary mechanisms of action. More innovative combinations might include co-delivery of multiple therapeutic genes targeting different aspects of neurodegeneration, such as neurotrophic factors (BDNF, GDNF) or anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10, TGF-β). The development of next-generation delivery technologies could overcome current limitations of direct brain injection. Blood-brain barrier-penetrating AAV variants, engineered through directed evolution approaches, might enable systemic delivery with CNS-specific expression. Additionally, focused ultrasound-mediated blood-brain barrier opening could facilitate targeted delivery of therapeutic vectors or small molecules to specific brain regions without invasive surgical procedures. Expansion to additional neurodegenerative diseases represents a natural extension of this therapeutic approach. Preliminary studies suggest potential applications in Huntington's disease, where microglial activation contributes significantly to pathology, and multiple sclerosis, where astrocyte-microglia interactions play crucial roles in demyelination and remyelination processes. The broad relevance of neuroinflammatory mechanisms across neurodegenerative diseases suggests that PLIN2 modulation could represent a platform technology with applications across multiple therapeutic areas. Advanced biomarker development will enable more precise monitoring of therapeutic effects and patient stratification. Emerging technologies including single-cell RNA sequencing of CSF cells and advanced neuroimaging techniques using novel PET tracers could provide unprecedented insights into treatment responses and guide personalized therapy approaches. The integration of artificial intelligence and machine learning approaches for biomarker analysis could identify predictive signatures for treatment response and optimize patient selection criteria. ---
Mechanistic Pathway Diagram
" Framed more explicitly, the hypothesis centers PLIN2 within the broader disease setting of neurodegeneration. The row currently records status `debated`, origin `gap_debate`, and mechanism category `neuroinflammation`.
SciDEX scoring currently records confidence 0.60, novelty 0.80, feasibility 0.70, impact 0.70, mechanistic plausibility 0.70, and clinical relevance 0.09.
Molecular and Cellular Rationale
The nominated target genes are `PLIN2` and the pathway label is `Insulin/IGF metabolic signaling`. Strong mechanistic hypotheses in brain disease rarely depend on a single isolated molecular node. Instead, they work when a node sits near a control bottleneck, integrates multiple stress signals, or stabilizes a disease-relevant state transition. That is the standard this hypothesis should be held to. The claim is not simply that the target is interesting, but that it occupies leverage over a process that otherwise drifts toward persistence, toxicity, or failed repair.
Gene-expression context on the row adds an important constraint: # Gene Expression Context
PLIN2
- Primary Function: Perilipin-2 (PLIN2) is a lipid droplet coat protein that serves as a critical regulator of lipid droplet dynamics and lipolysis. It prevents premature lipase-mediated hydrolysis of stored neutral lipids (triacylglycerols and cholesteryl esters) by creating a physical barrier that restricts cytosolic lipase access (ATGL, HSL) to the lipid core. PLIN2 also facilitates lipid droplet biogenesis, growth, and stability through direct interactions with the lipid droplet phospholipid monolayer.
- Brain Region Expression: PLIN2 shows highest expression in astrocytes throughout the brain, with prominent localization in white matter regions and periventricular zones where lipid metabolism is most active. Expression is particularly elevated in the hippocampus, corpus callosum, and cerebellum according to Allen Human Brain Atlas datasets. Neuronal PLIN2 expression is comparatively lower but functionally significant in specific populations, particularly in hypothalamic neurons involved in metabolic regulation.
- Cell Type Distribution:
- Astrocytes: Primary PLIN2-expressing cell type; constitutive high expression supporting lipid storage capacity and metabolic flexibility
- Oligodendrocytes: Significant expression supporting myelin lipid metabolism and energy homeostasis
- Neurons: Moderate expression in select populations, particularly metabolically active regions; more prominent in cultured neurons under lipid-rich conditions
- Microglia: Basal expression with upregulation during pro-inflammatory states
- Endothelial cells: Low baseline expression with context-dependent upregulation
- Expression Changes in Neurodegeneration:
- Alzheimer's Disease: PLIN2 expression is significantly dysregulated; transcriptomic studies show ~1.5-2.5 fold increase in hippocampal astrocytes in early-stage AD, correlating with metabolic stress responses
- Pathological lipid accumulation: Increased PLIN2 in post-mortem AD brains reflects compensatory lipid droplet expansion in metabolically compromised astrocytes; this accumulation correlates with amyloid-β burden and neuroinflammation
- Aging: Progressive decline in PLIN2-mediated lipid turnover efficiency; age-dependent reduction in lipolytic capacity despite maintained or increased PLIN2 protein levels
- Neuroinflammation: Microglial activation reduces PLIN2-mediated lipid homeostasis, promoting lipotoxicity; PLIN2 upregulation in activated microglia reflects attempted compensatory response to excessive lipid accumulation
- Mitochondrial dysfunction models: PLIN2 upregulation observed in neurodegenerative contexts involving impaired oxidative metabolism, suggesting metabolic circuit adaptation
- Relevance to Hypothesis Mechanism: PLIN2 modulation represents a "metabolic circuit breaker" by controlling the rate and extent of lipolysis in response to neuronal energy demands. In neurodegeneration, dysregulated PLIN2 function contributes to pathological lipid accumulation and impaired metabolic flexibility in astrocytes. Therapeutic reduction of PLIN2 would enhance lipid mobilization and oxidative metabolism, potentially alleviating metabolic stress associated with amyloid-β toxicity and neuroinflammation. Conversely, strategic PLIN2 elevation could protect against lipotoxicity-induced cell death by sequestering potentially harmful fatty acids within structured lipid droplets, isolating them from downstream metabolic complications.
- Quantitative Details:
- Lipid droplet density increases ~3-5 fold in astrocytes exposed to amyloid-β in vitro; PLIN2 protein content correlates with this expansion
- PLIN2 mRNA abundance represents approximately 0.2-0.5% of total astrocytic mRNA under basal conditions, rising to 0.8-1.2% under lipid-loading conditions
- Post-translational modification (phosphorylation by PKA, AMPK) modulates PLIN2 lipolytic control with ~40-60% reduction in lipase accessibility depending on phosphorylation status
Evidence Supporting the Hypothesis
Contradictory Evidence, Caveats, and Failure Modes
Clinical and Translational Relevance
From a translational perspective, this hypothesis only matters if it can be turned into a selection rule for experiments, biomarkers, or patient stratification. The row currently records market price `0.7373`, debate count `2`, citations `35`, predictions `5`, and falsifiability flag `1`. Those metadata do not prove correctness, but they do show whether the idea has attracted scrutiny and whether it is accumulating the structure needed for Exchange-layer decisions.
Experimental Predictions and Validation Strategy
First, the hypothesis should be decomposed into a perturbation experiment that directly manipulates PLIN2 in a model matched to neurodegeneration. The key readout should include pathway markers, cell-state markers, and at least one phenotype that maps onto "Metabolic Circuit Breaker via Lipid Droplet Modulation".
Second, the study design should include a rescue arm. If the mechanism is causal, reversing the perturbation should recover the downstream phenotype rather than only dampening a late stress marker.
Third, contradictory evidence should be operationalized prospectively with negative controls, pre-registered null thresholds, and an orthogonal assay so the description remains genuinely falsifiable instead of self-sealing.
Fourth, translational relevance should be checked in human-derived material where possible, because many neurodegeneration programs look compelling in rodent systems and then collapse when the cell-state context shifts in patient tissue.
Decision-Oriented Summary
In summary, the operational claim is that targeting PLIN2 within the disease frame of neurodegeneration can produce a measurable change in mechanism rather than only a cosmetic change in a terminal biomarker. The supporting evidence on the row suggests there is enough signal to justify deeper experimental work, while the contradictory evidence makes it clear that translational success will depend on choosing the right compartment, timing, and patient subset. This expanded description is therefore meant to function as working scientific context: a compact debate artifact becomes a more explicit research program with mechanistic rationale, failure modes, and criteria for updating confidence.
🧬 Mechanism
Curated pathway from expert analysis
graph TD
subgraph Pathophysiology["Neurodegeneration Pathophysiology"]
A["Metabolic stress and oxidative damage"] -->|"triggers"| B["PLIN2 dysregulation in astrocytes"]
B -->|"causes"| C["Impaired lipid droplet formation"]
C -->|"leads to"| D["Excessive free fatty acid release"]
D -->|"promotes"| E["Mitochondrial dysfunction"]
E -->|"generates"| F["Reactive oxygen species accumulation"]
F -->|"damages"| G["Neuronal membrane integrity"]
end
subgraph Intervention["PLIN2 Modulation Strategy"]
H["PLIN2 targeted therapy"] -->|"enhances"| I["Lipid droplet-mitochondrial contact sites"]
H -->|"stabilizes"| J["Astrocytic lipid storage capacity"]
I -->|"improves"| K["Fatty acid beta-oxidation"]
J -->|"prevents"| D
end
subgraph Mechanisms["Molecular Mechanisms"]
K -->|"supports"| L["ATP production and energy homeostasis"]
L -->|"maintains"| M["Calcium ion buffering capacity"]
M -->|"preserves"| N["Synaptic transmission"]
I -->|"reduces"| F
end
subgraph Outcomes["Clinical Outcomes"]
N -->|"improves"| O["Cognitive function preservation"]
L -->|"enhances"| P["Neuroprotective signaling"]
P -->|"leads to"| Q["Reduced neurodegeneration progression"]
end
A -->|"initiates"| H
G -->|"contributes to"| Q
style A fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style B fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style C fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style D fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style E fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style F fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style G fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style H fill:#81c784,stroke:#333,color:#000
style I fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style J fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style K fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style L fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style M fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style N fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style O fill:#ffd54f,stroke:#333,color:#000
style P fill:#ffd54f,stroke:#333,color:#000
style Q fill:#ffd54f,stroke:#333,color:#000⚖️ Evidence
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📙 Related Wiki Pages (15)
🏥 Translation
🧬 3D Protein Structure — PLIN2
No curated PDB or AlphaFold mapping for PLIN2 yet. Search RCSB →
🧠 GTEx v10 Brain ExpressionJSON
Median TPM across 13 brain regions for PLIN2 from GTEx v10.
💉 Clinical Trials (4)Relevance: 9%
Active
Completed
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No curated ClinVar variants loaded for this hypothesis.
Run scripts/backfill_clinvar_variants.py to fetch P/LP/VUS variants.
No DepMap CRISPR Chronos data found for PLIN2.
Run python3 scripts/backfill_hypothesis_depmap.py to populate.
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associated with (8)
causes (1)
co discussed (27)
enhances (2)
inhibits (3)
participates in (5)
regulates (1)
🗺️ KG Entities (51)
🔗 Dependency Graph (0 upstream, 4 downstream)
🔮 Predictions
| Prediction | Predicted | Observed | Status | Conf |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| If hypothesis is true, intervention otherwise be available for microglial uptake and utilization | otherwise be available for microglial uptake and utilization | — no observation — | pending | 0.60 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention enable temporal control over PLIN2 levels, allowing for personalized dosing strategies and potential reversibility if adverse effects occur | enable temporal control over PLIN2 levels, allowing for personalized dosing strategies and potential reversibility if adverse effects occur | — no observation — | pending | 0.60 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention enable more precise monitoring of therapeutic effects and patient stratification | enable more precise monitoring of therapeutic effects and patient stratification | — no observation — | pending | 0.60 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention enhance therapeutic efficacy and broaden clinical applications | enhance therapeutic efficacy and broaden clinical applications | — no observation — | pending | 0.60 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention provide synergistic benefits through complementary mechanisms of action | provide synergistic benefits through complementary mechanisms of action | — no observation — | pending | 0.60 |
📖 References (11)
- Ferroptosis of Microglia in Aging Human White Matter Injury.Adeniyi PA et al.. Annals of neurology (2023)
- FTO inhibition mitigates high-fat diet-induced metabolic disturbances and cognitive decline in SAMP8 mice.["Irisarri A" et al.. Molecular medicine (Cambridge, Mass.) (2025)
- Microglial glycolytic reprogramming in alzheimer's disease: association with impaired phagocytic function and altered vascular proximity.["Lu N" et al.. Journal of neuroinflammation (2025)
- Cerebral FURIN deficiency impairs astrocytic lipophagy through ITGAV maturation.Xie XY et al.. Autophagy (2026)
- Transcriptomic Analysis of High and Low Lipid Droplet Deposition Subpopulations of Chicken Preadipocytes Based on SSC Sorting.Wang B et al.. Animals (Basel) (2026)
- PCDHGC3 silencing promotes clear cell renal cell carcinoma metastasis via mTOR/HIF2α activation, lipid metabolism rewiring, and ferroptosis evasion.Celada L et al.. Cell death & disease (2026)
- Lipid accumulation drives cellular senescence in dopaminergic neurons.Russo T et al.. Aging (Albany NY) (2024)
- Expression pattern of perilipins in human brain during aging and in Alzheimer's disease.["Conte M" et al.. Neuropathology and applied neurobiology (2022)
- Targeting Mitochondria-Inflammation Circuit by β-Hydroxybutyrate Mitigates HFpEF.["Deng Y" et al.. Circulation research (2021)
- Telehealth in urology after the COVID-19 pandemic.["Gadzinski A" et al.. Nature reviews. Urology (2020)
- A single-cell atlas of mouse brain macrophages reveals unique transcriptional identities shaped by ontogeny and tissue environment.["Van Hove H" et al.. Nature neuroscience (2019)
▸Metadata
| status | proposed |
| _schema_version | 1 |
| hypothesis_type | None |
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🧬 Related Hypotheses — same target / disease (20)
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