The treatment of primary CoQ deficiency requires the targeting of multiple pathogenic mechanisms
Metadatos
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González García, Pilar; Jiménez-Sánchez, Laura; Corral-Sarasa, Julia; López-Herrador, Sergio; Torres Rusillo, Sara; Díaz-Casado, María Elena; López García, Luis CarlosEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2025-07-10Referencia bibliográfica
González-García, P., Jiménez-Sánchez, L., Corral-Sarasa, J. et al. The treatment of primary CoQ deficiency requires the targeting of multiple pathogenic mechanisms. Commun Med 5, 286 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-025-01000-8
Patrocinador
MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 / ERDF/EU (PID2021-126788OB-I00); Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA-602322); Junta de Andalucía (P20_00134; PEER-0083-2020); University of Granada (PPJIB2020.04, Unit of Excellence “UNETE” UCEPP2017-05)Resumen
Background: Primary coenzyme Q (CoQ) deficiency is a severe mitochondrial disorder
characterized by diverse clinical manifestations due to multiple pathomechanisms.
Although CoQ10 supplementation remains the standard treatment, its therapeutic efficacy is
limited by poor bioavailability and restricted tissue distribution, especially to the central
nervous system.
Methods: In this study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of combining CoQ10 with
vanillic acid (VA), a structural analog of 4-hydroxybenzoic acid, in both murine and human
models of primary CoQ deficiency, through phenotypic, biochemical, and molecular
analyses.
Results: In Coq9R239X mice, we demonstrate that co-administration of CoQ10 and VA
significantly extends lifespan and improves motor function beyond the effects observed with
either compound alone. Mechanistically, this enhanced therapeutic efficacy results from the
complementary actions of both compounds, i.e., CoQ10 increases quinone pools in
peripheral tissues and modulates one-carbon metabolism, particularly in the liver, while VA
reduces DMQ accumulation in the kidney and liver and exhibits potent antineuroinflammatory properties, leading to a reduction in gliosis. The co-treatment shows
remarkable tissue-specific responses, with the liver displaying the most pronounced
metabolic adaptations. In this tissue, the combined therapy restores the expression of genes
involved in sulfide oxidation and one-carbon metabolism pathways. We further validate
these findings in human COQ7-deficient fibroblasts, where the co-treatment normalizes key
metabolic pathways more effectively than individual treatments.
Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that combining CoQ10 with VA effectively addresses
multiple pathogenic mechanisms in CoQ deficiency, resulting in enhanced therapeutic
outcomes. This therapeutic strategy could represent a more effective and feasible treatment
approach for mitochondrial disorders, particularly those involving CoQ deficiency and
neurological manifestations.





