I'm not a chemist, and certainly no expert on paint formulations, but I have noticed the problem of MM paints turning gooey. I noticed certain colors are particularly succeptible to this, like black, insignia red, and chrome yellow. I have bought bottles of black, both flat and gloss, that were already going gooey. The red and yellow have a telltale sign of turning whitish in the bottle. When MM paints go gooey or turn whitish, I have not found anything that will reconstitute the paint so that it sprays or brushes well. I have a pet theory that contamination with thinner (regular paint thinner, MM airbrush thinner, lacquer thinner) accelerates the process, so I am very careful not to get any kind of thinner into the bottles of paint. This problem might be due to the paint formula changing in response to Federal VOC regulations getting more stringent over the years. I remember in the 1970s that any enamel could simply be cut with thinner when it started to get dry (due to me keeping the bottle open for too long, or not closing the cap well), and that the gooey problem did not exist. I have also noticed that the current MM enamels don't cover well, even flat black. With the old stuff, one or two passes with the airbrush would provide complete coverage, but nowadays I usually need four to six coats to get the same results (for black mind you, not a weak color like red or yellow).
The only thing I have found that works is to get another bottle of paint, or switch brands. I have started to use Tamiya acrylics cut with lacquer thinner for airbrushing, and it works very well. But the color selection cannot compare to MM. Sorry that I can't offer a better solution than tossing the bad paint.