The C. elegans
clk-1 mutants lack coenzyme Q9 and instead accumulate the biosynthetic intermediate demethoxy-Q9 (DMQ9).
clk-1 animals grow to adulthood, albeit slowly, if supplied with Q-containing E. coli. However, depending upon when Q is withdrawn from the diet, these animals either arrest development as larvae or become sterile adults. To understand this stage-dependent response to a Q-less diet, the quinone content of wild-type and
clk-1(
qm30) worms during development was determined. The quinone content varies in the different developmental stages in wild-type fed Q-replete E. coli. The amounts peak at the second larval stage, which coincides with the stage of arrest of
clk-1 larvae fed a Q-less diet from hatching. Levels of the endogenously synthesized DMQ9 are quite high in the
clk-1(
qm30) arrested larvae and sterile adults derived from dauer larvae that were fed Q-less food. Analysis of quinones from mutant and wild-type animals fed a Q-less diet establishes that the Q8 present is assimilated from the E. coli. Furthermore, this E. coli-specific Q isoform is present in mitochondria isolated from fertile
clk-1(
qm30) adults fed a Q-replete diet. These results suggest that DMQ cannot functionally replace Q and that the uptake and transport of dietary Q8 to mitochondria prevents the arrest and sterility phenotypes of
clk-1 mutants.