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Reduction in blood pressure following acute dietary nitrate ingestion is correlated with increased red blood cell S-nitrosothiol concentrations.

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posted on 2025-08-02, 10:45 authored by C Wei, A Vanhatalo, S Kadach, Z Stoyanov, M Abu-Alghayth, MI Black, MJ Smallwood, R Rajaram, PG Winyard, AM Jones
Dietary nitrate (NO3-) supplementation can enhance nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability and lower blood pressure (BP) in humans. The nitrite concentration ([NO2-]) in the plasma is the most commonly used biomarker of increased NO availability. However, it is unknown to what extent changes in other NO congeners, such as S-nitrosothiols (RSNOs), and in other blood components, such as red blood cells (RBC), also contribute to the BP lowering effects of dietary NO3-. We investigated the correlations between changes in NO biomarkers in different blood compartments and changes in BP variables following acute NO3- ingestion. Resting BP was measured and blood samples were collected at baseline, and at 1, 2, 3, 4 and 24 h following acute beetroot juice (∼12.8 mmol NO3-, ∼11 mg NO3-/kg) ingestion in 20 healthy volunteers. Spearman rank correlation coefficients were determined between the peak individual increases in NO biomarkers (NO3-, NO2-, RSNOs) in plasma, RBC and whole blood, and corresponding decreases in resting BP variables. No significant correlation was observed between increased plasma [NO2-] and reduced BP, but increased RBC [NO2-] was correlated with decreased systolic BP (rs = -0.50, P = 0.03). Notably, increased RBC [RSNOs] was significantly correlated with decreases in systolic (rs = -0.68, P = 0.001), diastolic (rs = -0.59, P = 0.008) and mean arterial pressure (rs = -0.64, P = 0.003). Fisher's z transformation indicated no difference in the strength of the correlations between increases in RBC [NO2-] or [RSNOs] and decreased systolic blood pressure. In conclusion, increased RBC [RSNOs] may be an important mediator of the reduction in resting BP observed following dietary NO3- supplementation.

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China Scholarship Council

University of Exeter

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© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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This is the final version. Available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record. Data availability: Data will be made available on request.

Journal

Nitric Oxide

Pagination

1-9

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United States

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2023-10-13T08:23:38Z

FOA date

2023-10-13T08:26:49Z

Citation

Vol. 138-139, pp. 1-9

Department

  • Clinical and Biomedical Sciences

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