%0 Journal Article %T Oral subchronic toxicity study and genetic toxicity evaluation of mitoquinone mesylate. %A Mitchell ES %A Lemke S %A Woodhead B %A Coleman D %J J Appl Toxicol %V 0 %N 0 %D 2024 Jun 11 %M 38860421 %F 3.628 %R 10.1002/jat.4654 %X Mitochondrial dysfunction and excessive reactive oxygen species production contributes to the pathophysiology of aging. Coenzyme Q10 is thought to protect mitochondria from oxidative damage; thus, mitoquinone was developed as mitochondria-targeted analogue with similar antioxidant activity. Mitoquinone is the oxidized form of mitoquinol. Mitoquinone/mitoquinol mesylate has been proposed as a food ingredient. As part of the safety analysis, we performed genotoxicity assays and a 39-week toxicity study to determine overall toxicity potential. Mitoquinone mesylate showed no evidence of genotoxic potential in two in vitro assays, bacterial reverse mutation and human lymphocyte chromosome aberration, nor in the in vivo micronucleus test in rats. In the 39-week study in dogs, there were no findings observed, which were considered to represent adverse systemic toxicity; therefore, the high dose level (40 mg/kg/day) was considered the NOAEL. The principal findings in this study were fecal disturbances and vomiting. These findings were considered to be due to a local, possibly irritant effect of the test substance on the gastrointestinal tract and were not considered adverse as there were no impacts on clinical or histopathology. This highest dose exceeds the expected daily human intake more than 100-fold. Data from well-designed clinical trials actively collecting safety endpoints corroborate that 20 mg/day can be safely consumed and is not likely to result in significant gastrointestinal complaints. These results support the conclusion that the use of mitoquinone/mitoquinol mesylate as a food ingredient is safe.