Reference: López-Martín JM, et al. (2007) Missense mutation of the COQ2 gene causes defects of bioenergetics and de novo pyrimidine synthesis. Hum Mol Genet 16(9):1091-7

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Abstract


Coenzyme Q(10) (CoQ(10)) deficiency has been associated with an increasing number of clinical phenotypes that respond to CoQ(10) supplementation. In two siblings with encephalomyopathy, nephropathy and severe CoQ(10) deficiency, a homozygous mutation was identified in the CoQ(10) biosynthesis gene COQ2, encoding polyprenyl-pHB transferase. To confirm the pathogenicity of this mutation, we have demonstrated that human wild-type, but not mutant COQ2, functionally complements COQ2 defective yeast. In addition, an equivalent mutation introduced in the yeast COQ2 gene also decreases both CoQ(6) concentration and growth in respiratory-chain dependent medium. Polyprenyl-pHB transferase activity was 33-45% of controls in COQ2 mutant fibroblasts. CoQ-dependent mitochondrial complexes activities were restored in deficient fibroblasts by CoQ(10) supplementation, and growth rate was restored in these cells by either CoQ(10) or uridine supplementation. This work is the first direct demonstration of the pathogenicity of a COQ2 mutation involved in human disease, and establishes yeast as a useful model to study human CoQ(10) deficiency. Moreover, we demonstrate that CoQ(10) deficiency in addition to the bioenergetics defect also impairs de novo pyrimidine synthesis, which may contribute to the pathogenesis of the disease.

Reference Type
Journal Article | Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Authors
López-Martín JM, Salviati L, Trevisson E, Montini G, DiMauro S, Quinzii C, Hirano M, Rodriguez-Hernandez A, Cordero MD, Sánchez-Alcázar JA, ... Show all
Primary Lit For
COQ2
Additional Lit For
coq2-Y258C

Phenotype Annotations 1 entry for 1 gene


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GenePhenotypeExperiment TypeMutant InformationStrain BackgroundChemicalDetails
COQ2respiratory growth: decreased
classical geneticsreduction of function
Allele: coq2-Y258C

mutation corresponding to homozygous mutation found in humans with CoQ10 deficiency

S288C glycerol
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Disease Annotations


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Gene Disease Ontology Term Qualifier Evidence Method Source Assigned On Reference

Functional Complementation Annotations 1 entry for 1 complement


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GeneSpeciesGene IDStrain backgroundDirectionDetailsSource
COQ2Homo sapiensHGNC:25223S288Cother complements yeastWild-type human COQ2 complements the yeast mutation but disease-associated alleles either do not complement or show partial complementation.SGD
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