What does mitochondrial health have to do with my eggs?

Direct Answer

Mitochondria are the energy source inside egg cells, and eggs have more mitochondria than any other cell in the body. The energy they produce drives chromosome separation during egg maturation and fuels every cell division in the early embryo. When mitochondrial function is impaired, eggs fail to segregate chromosomes accurately and embryos arrest before day 5. Mitochondrial health is one of the most direct and addressable drivers of egg and embryo quality.

Heather Kish

Heather Kish

Founder, Harvest Health with Heather · Creator, The Egg Awakening™

Best Move

Start CoQ10 supplementation at 400 to 600 mg daily in ubiquinol form at least 90 days before your next retrieval or the cycle in which you want to conceive.

Why It Works

CoQ10 is the primary electron carrier and antioxidant within the mitochondrial membrane. It declines with age in oocytes and is directly replenishable through supplementation during the 90-day egg maturation window.

Next Step

Check whether your current supplement protocol includes CoQ10 and, if so, whether the dose and form (ubiquinol vs. ubiquinone) are consistent with the research on egg quality support.

What you need to know

Why do egg cells need so many mitochondria?

A mature human egg contains between 100,000 and 200,000 mitochondria, compared to a few thousand in most somatic cells. This density is not incidental. It exists because of the extraordinary energy demands placed on the egg during two specific biological events: meiotic division during maturation, and the first five days of embryo development after fertilization.

During the final stages of egg maturation, the egg must complete two rounds of chromosomal division, separating 46 chromosomes into a set of 23 with precision that determines whether the resulting egg is chromosomally normal. The meiotic spindle that mechanically pulls chromosomes apart requires continuous ATP to assemble, maintain tension, and execute chromosome separation accurately. Without sufficient mitochondrial energy output, spindle function degrades and chromosomal segregation errors occur.

After fertilization, the resulting embryo divides from one cell to two, four, eight, sixteen, and beyond, reaching the blastocyst stage at approximately 100 cells by day five. Every one of these divisions requires ATP. Critically, the embryo cannot produce its own ATP until it activates its own genome at the eight-cell stage (day three). Before that point, all energy comes from the mitochondria inherited from the egg.

Research published in Human Reproduction found that the total mitochondrial DNA copy number in an egg was significantly associated with blastocyst development rate and clinical pregnancy rate in IVF cycles, confirming that mitochondrial capacity at the time of fertilization determines embryo developmental potential across the first five days.

How does impaired mitochondrial function affect chromosome segregation?

Impaired mitochondrial function affects chromosome segregation by reducing the ATP available to the meiotic spindle during the critical period of chromosome division. The meiotic spindle is a protein structure assembled specifically for chromosomal segregation and then disassembled after division is complete. This assembly and operation requires continuous energy input.

When mitochondrial energy output is insufficient:

  • Spindle assembly is delayed or incomplete, increasing the time chromosomes spend in an unstable configuration
  • Spindle tension is reduced, weakening the physical force that separates chromosome pairs
  • Checkpoint mechanisms that verify accurate segregation before the division completes are less able to halt division when errors are detected

The result is a higher probability of chromosomal non-disjunction, where chromosome pairs fail to separate correctly, producing an egg with the wrong number of chromosomes. This mitochondrial-driven aneuploidy is distinct from, and additive with, the age-related spindle deterioration that independently increases aneuploidy rates after 35.

The practical implication is that two women of the same age can produce different aneuploidy rates depending on the mitochondrial energy capacity of their eggs. A 38-year-old with well-supported mitochondrial function may produce a lower proportion of aneuploid eggs than an age-matched woman with compromised mitochondrial health, all else being equal.

A 2019 study in the Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics found that follicular fluid mitochondrial activity markers were significantly associated with chromosomal normalcy rates in PGT-tested embryos from the same retrieval cycle, independent of patient age.

What is CoQ10 and how does it support egg mitochondria?

CoQ10 (coenzyme Q10) is a fat-soluble compound that serves two critical functions within mitochondria: it acts as an electron carrier in the mitochondrial electron transport chain, the biochemical pathway that produces ATP, and it functions as the primary antioxidant within the mitochondrial membrane, protecting mitochondrial DNA and membrane lipids from oxidative damage.

Both functions are directly relevant to egg quality:

  • As an electron carrier: CoQ10 accepts electrons from the early steps of the electron transport chain and transfers them to the later steps, enabling the proton gradient that drives ATP production. Without adequate CoQ10, electron transfer becomes inefficient and ATP output decreases, regardless of how much substrate (glucose, fatty acids) is available to the mitochondria.
  • As a mitochondrial antioxidant: the electron transport chain inevitably produces some reactive oxygen species as a byproduct. CoQ10 neutralizes these species before they can damage the mitochondrial DNA that encodes the electron transport chain components themselves. Damaged mitochondrial DNA reduces ATP output and can be transmitted to the embryo.

CoQ10 levels in oocytes decline measurably with age, which is one reason mitochondrial function in eggs decreases as women get older. Unlike the structural spindle changes of aging, this CoQ10 decline is replenishable through supplementation.

Ubiquinol is the reduced, active form of CoQ10 and has significantly higher bioavailability than ubiquinone, the oxidized form. Most research on egg quality uses ubiquinol at doses of 400 to 800 mg daily, begun at least 60 days before the target retrieval cycle.

A 2015 randomized trial in Fertility and Sterility found that CoQ10 supplementation at 600 mg daily for 60 days before IVF significantly improved the number of mature eggs retrieved, fertilization rate, and the proportion of high-quality embryos at day 3 in women with diminished ovarian reserve compared to placebo controls.

What other factors damage mitochondria in egg cells?

CoQ10 depletion is the most directly addressable mitochondrial vulnerability in egg cells, but it is not the only one. Oxidative damage from multiple sources can impair mitochondrial function in developing oocytes, reducing ATP output and increasing the probability of chromosomal errors during maturation.

Primary sources of mitochondrial oxidative damage in oocytes:

  • Systemic inflammation: inflammatory cytokines trigger increased reactive oxygen species production in tissues throughout the body, including in the granulosa cells and follicular fluid surrounding developing eggs. This external oxidative burden reaches mitochondrial DNA and membrane lipids in the oocyte directly.
  • Blood sugar instability: repeated glucose spikes generate advanced glycation end products and increase mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production in rapidly metabolizing cells. Oocytes in active maturation are metabolically active and vulnerable to glucose-driven oxidative stress.
  • Environmental toxins: phthalates and bisphenols disrupt mitochondrial membrane function and have been measured in follicular fluid at concentrations that correlate with reduced mitochondrial membrane potential in granulosa cells from the same follicles.
  • Inadequate antioxidant intake: the follicular fluid antioxidant system relies on vitamin C, vitamin E, selenium, and glutathione to neutralize reactive oxygen species before they damage oocyte mitochondria. Dietary insufficiency in any of these reduces the protective buffer available during maturation.

Research in the Journal of Ovarian Research found that follicular fluid mitochondrial membrane potential, a direct measure of mitochondrial health in the follicular environment, was significantly lower in women with elevated systemic inflammatory markers compared to women with normal inflammatory profiles, confirming that systemic inflammation reaches and damages oocyte mitochondria.

How do I support mitochondrial health in the 90 days before retrieval or ovulation?

Supporting mitochondrial health in the 90-day window before retrieval or ovulation requires addressing mitochondrial energy capacity directly through CoQ10 supplementation and reducing the oxidative sources that damage mitochondrial function from outside the egg.

Direct mitochondrial support:

  • CoQ10: 400 to 800 mg daily in ubiquinol form, taken with a fat-containing meal for optimal absorption. Begin at least 60 days before the target cycle, with 90 days preferred for maximum tissue saturation.
  • Alpha-lipoic acid: a mitochondrial antioxidant that also regenerates other antioxidants including vitamins C and E. Used at 200 to 600 mg daily in some preconception protocols, though evidence is less robust than for CoQ10.
  • Vitamin D: supports mitochondrial biogenesis (the production of new mitochondria) through its role in gene expression regulation. Optimal levels of 50 to 80 ng/mL support mitochondrial density as well as follicular environment quality.

Reducing external mitochondrial damage:

  • Anti-inflammatory dietary pattern to reduce the systemic inflammatory cytokine burden reaching follicular fluid
  • Blood sugar stabilization through protein and fat at each meal, reduced refined carbohydrate, consistent meal timing
  • Reduction of phthalate and bisphenol exposure through glass or stainless steel food storage, filtered water, and reduced use of scented personal care products
  • Moderate rather than high-intensity exercise, which reduces rather than increases systemic oxidative load

A 2023 review in Antioxidants found that combined CoQ10 supplementation with an anti-inflammatory dietary pattern produced significantly greater improvements in embryo quality markers than either intervention alone, supporting a multi-pronged approach to mitochondrial support.

The The Fertility Intelligence Hub Perspective

Mitochondria are the engine. Egg quality is the car. You can service the engine.

When I first learned about the role of mitochondria in egg quality, something shifted for me. Here was a biological mechanism that explained why eggs from the same woman at the same age could produce such different outcomes, and a mechanism that was not sealed off from intervention.

The mitochondria in your eggs are running on CoQ10 that your body produces and that you can supplement. They are protected by antioxidants that come from your diet. They are damaged by oxidative stress that your lifestyle influences. That is not a small thing. That is the engine of egg quality, and it responds to what you do.

In The Egg Awakening program, mitochondrial support is one of the first things we address in the Predictable Path to Conception phase, because it sits at the foundation of everything that follows. Better mitochondrial function means more accurate chromosome segregation. More accurate chromosome segregation means more euploid embryos. More euploid embryos means more chances at a healthy pregnancy.

The mitochondria in your eggs right now are not the mitochondria that will be in your eggs in 90 days. That window is real, and it is one of the most actionable pieces of the entire fertility picture.

More questions about this topic

What is the difference between ubiquinol and ubiquinone CoQ10?

Ubiquinol is the reduced, active form of CoQ10 that cells can use directly. Ubiquinone is the oxidized form that must be converted to ubiquinol by the body before it can function in mitochondria. In younger adults, this conversion is efficient. With age, the conversion becomes less efficient, meaning ubiquinone supplements may not reliably raise tissue CoQ10 levels. Ubiquinol bypasses this conversion step and has consistently higher bioavailability in adults over 35. For egg quality support, ubiquinol is the preferred form.

Can I take too much CoQ10?

CoQ10 has a strong safety profile with no established upper limit. Research doses for egg quality range from 400 to 800 mg daily without reported adverse effects. Doses above 1,200 mg daily have occasionally been associated with mild gastrointestinal symptoms. CoQ10 can interact with warfarin (blood thinning medication) by reducing its effectiveness. If you are taking anticoagulant medication, discuss CoQ10 supplementation with your physician before starting.

Does CoQ10 help with natural conception as well as IVF?

Yes. The mitochondrial support that CoQ10 provides affects egg quality regardless of whether conception is natural or assisted. For natural conception, the eggs ovulated in the three months following a CoQ10 protocol reflect the improved mitochondrial environment. The benefit is not limited to IVF retrievals. Women trying to conceive naturally can begin CoQ10 three months before the cycle in which they want to conceive and continue through the conception attempt.

Should I take CoQ10 if I am under 35?

The research evidence is strongest for women over 35 and women with prior poor embryo quality findings. Under 35, mitochondrial CoQ10 levels are typically higher naturally. However, if there is evidence of poor embryo development, early arrest, or oxidative stress contributors such as significant inflammation or metabolic disruption, CoQ10 supplementation is reasonable regardless of age. It is a low-risk intervention with a plausible mechanism of benefit across age groups.

How do I know if my mitochondrial function is improving?

Direct mitochondrial function testing in oocytes requires IVF-level assessment and cannot be done before retrieval. The most practical indicators of improving mitochondrial support are improved embryo development outcomes in subsequent cycles: higher rates of embryos reaching blastocyst stage by day 5, improved fertilization rates, and lower rates of early arrest. Intermediate cycle markers including a more stable luteal phase also reflect improved corpus luteum function, which correlates with follicle quality improvements.

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Heather Kish

Heather Kish

Heather Kish is the founder of Harvest Health with Heather and the creator of The Egg Awakening, a 90-day root-cause fertility coaching program. After four years of her own unexplained infertility, multiple pregnancy losses, and fibroids, she built a root-cause approach combining nutrition, nervous-system regulation, and egg health support. She conceived via IVF at 44 and now helps other women find answers faster and suffer less.

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