Effect of dietary nitrate levels on nitrate fluxes in rat skeletal muscle and liver

Rodent skeletal muscle has high levels of nitrate ions and this endogenous nitrate reservoir can supply nitrite/nitric oxide (NO) for functional hyperemia and/or for other physiological processes in muscle during exercise. Mice with a NOS1 knockout have markedly reduced muscle nitrate levels, sugges...

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Published inNitric oxide Vol. 75; pp. 1 - 7
Main Authors Gilliard, Cameron N., Lam, Jeff K., Cassel, Katelyn S., Park, Ji Won, Schechter, Alan N., Piknova, Barbora
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.05.2018
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Summary:Rodent skeletal muscle has high levels of nitrate ions and this endogenous nitrate reservoir can supply nitrite/nitric oxide (NO) for functional hyperemia and/or for other physiological processes in muscle during exercise. Mice with a NOS1 knockout have markedly reduced muscle nitrate levels, suggesting NO production by NOS and its reaction with oxymyoglobin as a source of nitrate. However, oxygen levels are normally low in most internal organs, which raises the possibility that nitrate-derived NO pathway is physiologically important even at “normoxia”, and muscle nitrate reservoir is the main endogenous NO backup when exogeneous (dietary) nitrate intake is low. Using dietary nitrate manipulations, we explore the importance of diet for maintaining and renewal of muscle nitrate reservoir and its levels in other tissues. We found that skeletal muscle nitrate is extensively used when nitrate in diet is low. One week of nitrate starvation leads to dramatic nitrate depletion in skeletal muscle and a substantial decrease in liver. Nitrate depleted from skeletal muscle during starvation is quickly recovered from new dietary sources, with an unexpected significant “overload” compared with animals not subjected to nitrate starvation. Our results suggest the importance of dietary nitrate for nitrate reserves in muscle and in other tissues, when compared with endogenous NOS-derived sources. This requires an active transport mechanism for sequestering nitrate into cells, stimulated by lack of dietary nitrate or other enzymatic changes. These results confirm the hypothesis that muscle is a major storage site for nitrate in mammals. •Skeletal muscle nitrate reservoir is depleted by low nitrate diet.•Nitrate reintroduction leads to muscle nitrate reservoir recovery and overload.•Organ nitrate levels result from balance between local nitrate reduction and influx.•Main question: what should be considered “normal” organ nitrate levels?•Still unknown: What should be optimal dietary level of nitrate?
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current affiliation: Icahn School of Medicine, Mt. Sinai, New York, NY
current affiliation: Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Hershey, PA
ISSN:1089-8603
1089-8611
DOI:10.1016/j.niox.2018.01.010