COQ8B is a human gene. This page covers the gene's normal function, disease associations, expression patterns, and key research findings relevant to neurodegeneration.
COQ8B is a human gene. This page covers the gene's normal function, disease associations, expression patterns, and key research findings relevant to neurodegeneration.
The COQ8B gene (also known as ADCK4 — aarF domain containing kinase 4) encodes a mitochondrial protein essential for coenzyme Q (ubiquinone) biosynthesis. CoQ8B functions as a protein kinase within the coenzyme Q biosynthesis pathway, and mutations in this gene cause both hereditary glomerulonephropathy and have been implicated in Parkinson's disease pathogenesis.
Gene Overview
Protein Structure and Function
COQ8B is a 678-amino acid mitochondrial protein with the following domains:
AarF Domain: The signature domain containing kinase activity
N-terminal Mitochondrial Targeting Sequence: Directs protein to mitochondria
Transmembrane Domains: For mitochondrial membrane association
COQ8B (along with its paralog COQ8A) is essential for the biosynthesis of coenzyme Q (CoQ), also known as ubiquinone. This is a critical lipid-soluble electron carrier in the mitochondrial electron transport chain:
Kinase Activity: COQ8B phosphorylates intermediate compounds in the CoQ biosynthesis pathway
Complex Assembly: Helps assemble the multi-enzyme CoQ biosynthesis complex
CoQ10 Production: Directs production of CoQ10 (ubiquinone-10)
Mitochondrial Quality Control: Maintains proper electron transport chain function
Coenzyme Q Function
Coenzyme Q (CoQ) is essential for:
Electron Transfer: Complex I and II transfer electrons to CoQ
ATP Production: Via oxidative phosphorylation
Antioxidant Protection: CoQ neutralizes reactive oxygen species (ROS)
Mitochondrial Membrane Potential: Maintains proper mitochondrial function
Expression Pattern
COQ8B is expressed ubiquitously with high expression in:
Kidney: Especially glomerular cells (podocytes)
Brain: Neurons, particularly dopaminergic neurons
Heart: Cardiomyocytes
Muscle: Skeletal muscle fibers
Liver: Hepatocytes
Mitochondrial localization is confirmed in all cell types.
Biological Functions
Mitochondrial Function
COQ8B is critical for:
Respiratory Chain Support: Ensuring proper electron flow
GWAS and sequencing studies have identified COQ8B variants in PD patients:
Increased risk of sporadic PD
Earlier age of onset in carriers
More severe phenotype
Other Associations
Cardiomyopathy: Some COQ8B variants associated with cardiac issues
Hearing Loss: Secondary to kidney disease
Neurological Symptoms: In some patients with COQ8B mutations
Interaction Network
COQ8B interacts with:
CoQ Biosynthesis Complex
COQ1 (PDS1) - First step enzyme
COQ2 - Para-hydroxybenzoate polyprenyltransferase
COQ3 - O-methyltransferase
COQ4 - Complex assembly
COQ5 - C-terminal methylation
COQ6 - Hydroxylase
COQ7 - Final step, converting DMQH2 to CoQ
COQ8A (ADCK3) - Paralog with overlapping function
COQ9 - Essential cofactor
COQ10 - Product itself
Mitochondrial Proteins
Complex I subunits (NDUFS1, NDUFV1)
Complex II subunits
Mitochondrial DNA polymerase
PINK1 (PD mitophagy protein)
Parkin
Genetic Variants
Pathogenic Mutations
Over 40 pathogenic variants identified:
Missense mutations: Most common
Nonsense mutations: Truncated proteins
Splice site mutations: Aberrant splicing
Common variants:
c.1045G>A (p.G349S)
c.901C>T (p.R301*)
c.638G>A (p.R213Q)
Polymorphisms
SNPs studied in PD:
rs12239046: Associated with PD risk
rs72552286: In regulatory region
Therapeutic Approaches
CoQ10 in Parkinson's Disease
Multiple clinical trials have tested CoQ10 in PD:
High-dose CoQ10 (1200-3000 mg/day) showed promise in early trials
Later large trials showed mixed results
May benefit patients with specific genotypes (including COQ8B variants)
Research Models
Animal Models
Knockout mice: Embryonic lethal, demonstrating essential function
Conditional knockouts: Tissue-specific deletions
Zebrafish: coq8b morphants show renal phenotypes
C. elegans: For pathway studies
Cell Models
Patient-derived podocytes: From SRNS patients
iPSC-derived neurons: From PD patients
Yeast models: COQ pathway conservation
Summary
COQ8B encodes a critical enzyme for coenzyme Q biosynthesis, linking mitochondrial function to both kidney disease (SRNS) and Parkinson's disease. Understanding this gene's function illuminates:
The importance of mitochondrial health in dopaminergic neurons
Why CoQ10 supplementation helps some patients
Potential therapeutic targets for neurodegenerative disease
The connection between CoQ biosynthesis and neurodegeneration makes COQ8B an important gene for understanding Parkinson's disease pathogenesis.