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Oral nitrite restores age-dependent phenotypes in eNOS-null mice.

Citation
Tenopoulou, M., et al. “Oral Nitrite Restores Age-Dependent Phenotypes In Enos-Null Mice.”. Jci Insight.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Author Margarita Tenopoulou, Paschalis-Thomas Doulias, Kent Nakamoto, Kiara Berrios, Gabriella Zura, Chenxi Li, Michael Faust, Veronika Yakovishina, Perry Evans, Lu Tan, Michael J Bennett, Nathaniel W Snyder, William J Quinn, Joseph A Baur, Dmitriy N Atochin, Paul L Huang, Harry Ischiropoulos
Keywords fatty acid oxidation, Metabolism, nitric oxide, Therapeutics
Abstract

Alterations in the synthesis and bioavailability of NO are central to the pathogenesis of cardiovascular and metabolic disorders. Although endothelial NO synthase-derived (eNOS-derived) NO affects mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid β-oxidation, the pathophysiological significance of this regulation remains unclear. Accordingly, we determined the contributions of eNOS/NO signaling in the adaptive metabolic responses to fasting and in age-induced metabolic dysfunction. Four-month-old eNOS-/- mice are glucose intolerant and exhibit serum dyslipidemia and decreased capacity to oxidize fatty acids. However, during fasting, eNOS-/- mice redirect acetyl-CoA to ketogenesis to elevate circulating levels of β-hydroxybutyrate similar to wild-type mice. Treatment of 4-month-old eNOS-/- mice with nitrite for 10 days corrected the hypertension and serum hyperlipidemia and normalized the rate of fatty acid oxidation. Fourteen-month-old eNOS-/- mice exhibited metabolic derangements, resulting in reduced utilization of fat to generate energy, lower resting metabolic activity, and diminished physical activity. Seven-month administration of nitrite to eNOS-/- mice reversed the age-dependent metabolic derangements and restored physical activity. While the eNOS/NO signaling is not essential for the metabolic adaptation to fasting, it is critical for regulating systemic metabolic homeostasis in aging. The development of age-dependent metabolic disorder is prevented by low-dose replenishment of bioactive NO.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
JCI insight
Volume
3
Issue
16
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2379-3708
DOI
10.1172/jci.insight.122156
Alternate Journal
JCI Insight
PMID
30135317
PMCID
PMC6141175
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