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Clinical whole-exome sequencing reveals a common pathogenic variant in patients with CoQ10 deficiency: An underdiagnosed cause of mitochondriopathy

Authors :
S. K. Yee Medical Foundation
Ling, Tsz-ki
Law, Chun-yiu
Yan, Kin-wing
Fong, Nai-chung
Wong, Ka-chung
Lee, Ka-lok
Chiu-wing Chu, Winnie
Brea-Calvo, Gloria
Lam, Ching-wan
S. K. Yee Medical Foundation
Ling, Tsz-ki
Law, Chun-yiu
Yan, Kin-wing
Fong, Nai-chung
Wong, Ka-chung
Lee, Ka-lok
Chiu-wing Chu, Winnie
Brea-Calvo, Gloria
Lam, Ching-wan
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

[Background]: Primary CoQ deficiency occurs because of the defective biosynthesis of coenzyme Q, one of the key components of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. Patients with this disease present with a myriad of non-specific symptoms and signs, posing a diagnostic challenge. Whole-exome sequencing is vital in the diagnosis of these cases.<br />[Case]: Three unrelated cases presenting as either encephalopathy or cardiomyopathy have been diagnosed to harbor a common pathogenic variant c.370G > A in COQ4. COQ4 encodes a key structural component for stabilizing the multienzymatic CoQ biosynthesis complex. This variant is detected only among East and South Asian populations.<br />[Conclusions]: Based on the population data and our case series, COQ4-related mitochondriopathy is likely an underrecognized condition. We recommend including the COQ4 c.370G > A variant as a part of the screening process for mitochondriopathy in Chinese populations.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286538357
Document Type :
Electronic Resource