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Publication : Ubiquinone is necessary for mouse embryonic development but is not essential for mitochondrial respiration.

First Author  Levavasseur F Year  2001
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  276
Issue  49 Pages  46160-4
PubMed ID  11585841 Mgi Jnum  J:73121
Mgi Id  MGI:2154595 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M108980200
Citation  Levavasseur F, et al. (2001) Ubiquinone is necessary for mouse embryonic development but is not essential for mitochondrial respiration. J Biol Chem 276(49):46160-4
abstractText  Ubiquinone (UQ) is a lipid found in most biological membranes and is a co-factor in many redox processes including the mitochondrial respiratory chain. UQ has been implicated in protection from oxidative stress and in the aging process. Consequently, it is used as a dietary supplement and to treat mitochondrial diseases. Mutants of the clk-1 gene of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans are fertile and have an increased life span, although they do not produce UQ but instead accumulate a biosynthetic intermediate, demethoxyubiquinone (DMQ). DMQ appears capable to partially replace UQ for respiration in vivo and in vitro. We have produced a vertebrate model of cells and tissues devoid of UQ by generating a knockout mutation of the murine orthologue of clk-1 (mclk1). We find that mclk1-/- embryonic stem cells and embryos accumulate DMQ instead of UQ. As in the nematode mutant, the activity of the mitochondrial respiratory chain of -/- embryonic stem cells is only mildly affected (65% of wild-type oxygen consumption). However, mclk1-/- embryos arrest development at midgestation, although earlier developmental stages appear normal. These findings indicate that UQ is necessary for vertebrate embryonic development but suggest that mitochondrial respiration is not the function for which UQ is essential when DMQ is present.
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