Human COQ4 deficiency: delineating the clinical, metabolic and neuroimaging phenotypes

人类 COQ4 缺乏症:描述临床、代谢和神经影像学表型

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作者:Lucia Laugwitz, Annette Seibt, Diran Herebian, Susana Peralta, Imke Kienzle, Rebecca Buchert, Ruth Falb, Darja Gauck, Amelie Müller, Mona Grimmel, Stefanie Beck-Woedel, Jan Kern, Karim Daliri, Pegah Katibeh, Katharina Danhauser, Steffen Leiz, Viola Alesi, Fabian Baertling, Gessica Vasco, Robert Stei

Background

Human coenzyme Q4 (COQ4) is essential for coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) biosynthesis. Pathogenic variants in COQ4 cause childhood-onset neurodegeneration. We aimed to delineate the clinical spectrum and the cellular consequences of COQ4 deficiency.

Conclusion

Our study describes the heterogeneous clinical presentation of COQ4 deficiency and identifies phenotypic subtypes. Cell-based studies support the pathogenic characteristics of COQ4 variants. Due to the insufficient clinical response to oral CoQ10 supplementation, alternative treatment strategies are warranted.

Methods

Clinical course and neuroradiological findings in a large cohort of paediatric patients with COQ4 deficiency were analysed. Functional studies in patient-derived cell lines were performed.

Results

We characterised 44 individuals from 36 families with COQ4 deficiency (16 newly described). A total of 23 different variants were identified, including four novel variants in COQ4. Correlation analyses of clinical and neuroimaging findings revealed three disease patterns: type 1: early-onset phenotype with neonatal brain anomalies and epileptic encephalopathy; type 2: intermediate phenotype with distinct stroke-like lesions; and type 3: moderate phenotype with non-specific brain pathology and a stable disease course. The functional relevance of COQ4 variants was supported by in vitro studies using patient-derived fibroblast lines. Experiments revealed significantly decreased COQ4 protein levels, reduced levels of cellular CoQ10 and elevated levels of the metabolic intermediate 6-demethoxyubiquinone.

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