Scientific Reports (Mar 2023)

Distribution of dietary nitrate and its metabolites in rat tissues after 15N-labeled nitrate administration

  • Ji Won Park,
  • Barbora Piknova,
  • Peter J. Walter,
  • Hongyi Cai,
  • Supranee Upanan,
  • Samantha M. Thomas,
  • Khalid J. Tunau-Spencer,
  • Alan N. Schechter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-28190-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract The reduction pathway of nitrate (NO3 −) and nitrite (NO2 −) to nitric oxide (NO) contributes to regulating many physiological processes. To examine the rate and extent of dietary nitrate absorption and its reduction to nitrite, we supplemented rat diets with Na15NO3-containing water (1 g/L) and collected plasma, urine and several tissue samples. We found that plasma and urine showed 8.8- and 11.7-fold increases respectively in total nitrate concentrations in 1-day supplementation group compared to control. In tissue samples—gluteus, liver and eyes—we found 1.7-, 2.4- and 4.2-fold increases respectively in 1-day supplementation group. These increases remained similar in 3-day supplementation group. LC–MS/MS analysis showed that the augmented nitrate concentrations were primarily from the exogenously provided 15N-nitrate. Overall nitrite concentrations and percent of 15N-nitrite were also greatly increased in all samples after nitrate supplementation; eye homogenates showed larger increases compared to gluteus and liver. Moreover, genes related to nitrate transport and reduction (Sialin, CLC and XOR) were upregulated after nitrate supplementation for 3 days in muscle (Sialin 2.3-, CLC1 1.3-, CLC3 2.1-, XOR 2.4-fold) and eye (XOR 1.7-fold) homogenates. These results demonstrate that dietary nitrate is quickly absorbed into circulation and tissues, and it can be reduced to nitrite in tissues (and likely to NO) suggesting that nitrate-enriched diets can be an efficient intervention to enhance nitrite and NO bioavailability.