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Dietary nitrate (NO3-) supplementation can increase nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability, reduce blood pressure (BP) and improve muscle contractile function in humans. Plasma nitrite concentration (plasma NO2-) is the most oft-used biomarker of NO bioavailability. However, it is unclear which of several NO biomarkers (NO3-, NO2-, S-nitrosothiols (RSNOs)) in plasma, whole blood (WB), red blood cells (RBC) and skeletal muscle correlate with the physiological effects of acute and chronic dietary NO3- supplementation. Using a randomized, double-blind, crossover design, 12 participants (9 males) consumed NO3--rich beetroot juice (BR) (∼12.8 mmol NO3-) and NO3--depleted placebo beetroot juice (PL) acutely and then chronically (for two weeks). Biological samples were collected, resting BP was assessed, and 10 maximal voluntary isometric contractions of the knee extensors were performed at 2.5-3.5 hours following supplement ingestion on day 1 and day 14. Diastolic BP was significantly lower in BR (-2 ± 3 mmHg, P=0.03) compared to PL following acute supplementation, while the absolute rate of torque development (RTD) was significantly greater in BR at 0-30 ms (39 ± 57 N.m.s-1, P=0.03) and 0-50 ms (79 ± 99 N.m.s-1, P=0.02) compared to PL following two weeks supplementation. Greater WB RSNOs rather than plasma NO2- was correlated with lower diastolic BP (r=-0.68, P=0.02) in BR compared to PL following acute supplementation, while greater skeletal muscle NO3- was correlated with greater RTD at 0-30 ms (r=0.64, P=0.03) in BR compared to PL following chronic supplementation. We conclude that RSNOs in blood, and NO3- in skeletal muscle, are relevant biomarkers of NO bioavailability which are related to the reduction of BP and the enhanced muscle contractile function following dietary NO3- ingestion in humans.
Wei et al. (Wed,) studied this question.