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Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II

Nitrate and nitrite supplement deficient endogenous nitric oxide (NO) formation. While these anions may generate NO, recent studies have shown that circulating nitrite levels do not necessarily correlate with the antihypertensive effect of oral nitrite administration and that formation of nitrosylat...

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Autores principales: Pinheiro, Lucas C., Oliveira-Paula, Gustavo H., Ferreira, Graziele C., Dal-Cin de Paula, Tiago, Duarte, Diego A., Costa-Neto, Claudio M., Tanus-Santos, Jose E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7596338/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33126056
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2020.101769
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author Pinheiro, Lucas C.
Oliveira-Paula, Gustavo H.
Ferreira, Graziele C.
Dal-Cin de Paula, Tiago
Duarte, Diego A.
Costa-Neto, Claudio M.
Tanus-Santos, Jose E.
author_facet Pinheiro, Lucas C.
Oliveira-Paula, Gustavo H.
Ferreira, Graziele C.
Dal-Cin de Paula, Tiago
Duarte, Diego A.
Costa-Neto, Claudio M.
Tanus-Santos, Jose E.
author_sort Pinheiro, Lucas C.
collection PubMed
description Nitrate and nitrite supplement deficient endogenous nitric oxide (NO) formation. While these anions may generate NO, recent studies have shown that circulating nitrite levels do not necessarily correlate with the antihypertensive effect of oral nitrite administration and that formation of nitrosylated species (RXNO) in the stomach is critically involved in this effect. This study examined the possibility that RXNO formed in the stomach after oral nitrite administration promotes target protein nitrosylation in the vasculature, inhibits vasoconstriction and the hypertensive responses to angiotensin II. Our results show that oral nitrite treatment enhances circulating RXNO concentrations (measured by ozone-based chemiluminescence methods), increases aortic protein kinase C (PKC) nitrosylation (measured by resin-assisted capture SNO-RAC method), and reduces both angiotensin II-induced vasoconstriction (isolated aortic ring preparation) and hypertensive (in vivo invasive blood pressure measurements) effects implicating PKC nitrosylation as a key mechanism for the responses to oral nitrite. Treatment of rats with the nitrosylating compound S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) resulted in the same effects described for oral nitrite. Moreover, partial depletion of thiols with buthionine sulfoximine prevented PKC nitrosylation and the blood pressure effects of oral nitrite. Further confirming a role for PKC nitrosylation, preincubation of aortas with GSNO attenuated the responses to both angiotensin II and to a direct PKC activator, and this effect was attenuated by ascorbate (reverses GSNO-induced nitrosylation). GSNO-induced nitrosylation also inhibited the increases in Ca2+ mobilization in angiotensin II-stimulated HEK293T cells expressing angiotensin type 1 receptor. Together, these results are consistent with the idea that PKC nitrosylation in the vasculature may underlie oral nitrite treatment-induced reduction in the vascular and hypertensive responses to angiotensin II.
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spelling pubmed-75963382020-11-02 Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II Pinheiro, Lucas C. Oliveira-Paula, Gustavo H. Ferreira, Graziele C. Dal-Cin de Paula, Tiago Duarte, Diego A. Costa-Neto, Claudio M. Tanus-Santos, Jose E. Redox Biol Research Paper Nitrate and nitrite supplement deficient endogenous nitric oxide (NO) formation. While these anions may generate NO, recent studies have shown that circulating nitrite levels do not necessarily correlate with the antihypertensive effect of oral nitrite administration and that formation of nitrosylated species (RXNO) in the stomach is critically involved in this effect. This study examined the possibility that RXNO formed in the stomach after oral nitrite administration promotes target protein nitrosylation in the vasculature, inhibits vasoconstriction and the hypertensive responses to angiotensin II. Our results show that oral nitrite treatment enhances circulating RXNO concentrations (measured by ozone-based chemiluminescence methods), increases aortic protein kinase C (PKC) nitrosylation (measured by resin-assisted capture SNO-RAC method), and reduces both angiotensin II-induced vasoconstriction (isolated aortic ring preparation) and hypertensive (in vivo invasive blood pressure measurements) effects implicating PKC nitrosylation as a key mechanism for the responses to oral nitrite. Treatment of rats with the nitrosylating compound S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) resulted in the same effects described for oral nitrite. Moreover, partial depletion of thiols with buthionine sulfoximine prevented PKC nitrosylation and the blood pressure effects of oral nitrite. Further confirming a role for PKC nitrosylation, preincubation of aortas with GSNO attenuated the responses to both angiotensin II and to a direct PKC activator, and this effect was attenuated by ascorbate (reverses GSNO-induced nitrosylation). GSNO-induced nitrosylation also inhibited the increases in Ca2+ mobilization in angiotensin II-stimulated HEK293T cells expressing angiotensin type 1 receptor. Together, these results are consistent with the idea that PKC nitrosylation in the vasculature may underlie oral nitrite treatment-induced reduction in the vascular and hypertensive responses to angiotensin II. Elsevier 2020-10-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7596338/ /pubmed/33126056 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2020.101769 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Pinheiro, Lucas C.
Oliveira-Paula, Gustavo H.
Ferreira, Graziele C.
Dal-Cin de Paula, Tiago
Duarte, Diego A.
Costa-Neto, Claudio M.
Tanus-Santos, Jose E.
Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II
title Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II
title_full Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II
title_fullStr Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II
title_full_unstemmed Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II
title_short Oral nitrite treatment increases S-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase C and attenuates the responses to angiotensin II
title_sort oral nitrite treatment increases s-nitrosylation of vascular protein kinase c and attenuates the responses to angiotensin ii
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7596338/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33126056
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2020.101769
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