A lipid fraction from Escherichia coli was extracted with apolar solvents and was found to protect mice from a number of experimental bacterial infections. The benzoquinone, ubiquinone-8, was isolated from this extract by high pressure liquid chromatography and identified as such by nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry. At a dose of 25 mg/kg this substance was found to provide complete protection against otherwise lethal infections with gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria in mice. Treatment was most effective when given intravenously 24 h before infection. In comparative studies, ubiquinone-8 had a clearly higher activity than ubiquinones-4, Q6, and Q10. A highly significant increase in the clearance rate of bacteria from the blood by the spleen and the liver of treated animals, correlated well with the protective effect of ubiquinone-8. The compound stimulated the ability of mouse macrophages to incorporate sheep erythrocytes and significantly increased the number of antibody-producing cells in spleens of mice.
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1 November 1978
Article|
November 01 1978
Nonspecific resistance to bacterial infections. Enhancement by ubiquinone-8.
L H Block
A Georgopoulos
P Mayer
J Drews
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
J Exp Med (1978) 148 (5): 1228–1240.
Citation
L H Block, A Georgopoulos, P Mayer, J Drews; Nonspecific resistance to bacterial infections. Enhancement by ubiquinone-8.. J Exp Med 1 November 1978; 148 (5): 1228–1240. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.148.5.1228
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