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Cerebrospinal fluid levels of coenzyme Q10 are reduced in multiple system atrophy

Authors :
Francesc Valldeoriola
Lluís Planellas
Francesca Antonelli
Darly M. Giraldo
Serge Jaumà
Manel Fernández
Paloma Bravo
Claustre Pont-Sunyer
Mario Ezquerra
Josep Saura
Rubén Fernández-Santiago
Eduard Tolosa
Jaume Campdelacreu
Domenica Marchese
Nuria Caballol
Esteban Muñoz
María José Martí
Oriol De Fabregues
Pau Pastor
Montserrat Pujol
Matilde Calopa
Yaroslau Compta
Marta Soto
Ana Cámara
Víctor Puente
Gian Gaetano Tartaglia
Jorge Hernández-Vara
Teresa Botta-Orfila
Javier Pagonabarraga
Àngels Bayés
Ferran Torres
Asunción Ávila
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2018.

Abstract

Introduction The finding of mutations of the COQ2 gene and reduced coenzyme Q10 levels in the cerebellum in multiple system atrophy (MSA) suggest that coenzyme Q10 is relevant to MSA pathophysiology. Two recent studies have reported reduced coenzyme Q10 levels in plasma and serum (respectively) of MSA patients compared to Parkinson's disease and/or control subjects, but with largely overlapping values, limited comparison with other parkinsonisms, or dependence on cholesterol levels. We hypothesized that cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is reliable to assess reductions in coenzyme Q10 as a candidate biomarker of MSA. Methods In this preliminary cross-sectional study we assessed CSF coenzyme Q10 levels in 20 patients with MSA from the multicenter Catalan MSA Registry and of 15 PD patients, 10 patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), and 15 control subjects from the Movement Disorders Unit Biosample Collection of Hospital Clinic de Barcelona. A specific ELISA kit was used to determine CSF coenzyme Q10 levels. CSF coenzyme Q10 levels were compared in MSA vs. the other groups globally, pair-wise, and by binary logistic regression models adjusted for age, sex, disease severity, disease duration, and dopaminergic treatment. Results CSF coenzyme Q10 levels were significantly lower in MSA than in other groups in global and pair-wise comparisons, as well as in multivariate regression models. Receiver operating characteristic curve analyses yielded significant areas under the curve for MSA vs. PD, PSP and controls. Conclusions These findings support coenzyme Q10 relevance in MSA. Low CSF coenzyme Q10 levels deserve further consideration as a biomarker of MSA.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85deda96c149e988ee008cf3bdc4a805