4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Orally administered nitrite attenuates cardiac allograft rejection in rats

Journal

SURGERY
Volume 146, Issue 2, Pages 155-165

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.surg.2009.05.002

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Background. Recent studies have shown that nitrite serves as an endogenous reservoir of nitric oxide (NO), particularly in the presence of hypoxia and ischemia. 14 e hypothesized that exogenous nitrite supplementation would protect cardiac allografts. Methods. fully allogeneic heterotopic heart. transplantation was performed in LEW to BN combination, under tacrolimus. Animals were given either regular or nitrite/nitrate (NOx)-low chow combined with regular water or water containing nitrite (50 mg/L) for 120 days continuously beginning 7 days before transplant. Results. Serum nitrite/nitrate levels were significantly higher in animals given nitrite water for 30 days, and lower in the animals fed, with NOx-low diet than those in animals who received standard diet. Supplementation of drinking water with nitrite enhanced heart, graft, survival to a median, of >120 days from 49.5 days in animals fed a standard. diet. In. contrast, dietary NOx insufficiency resulted in significantly earlier rejection of allografts (30.5 days). In correlation with graft survival, mRNA levels for interferon-gamma in the spleen or tumor necrosis factor-alpha in the grafts were significantly less when animals were fed nitrite water compared with those without nitrite supplementation. Conclusion. These data demonstrate that dietary nitrite supplementation was significantly effective in preventing development of allograft rejection. (Surgery 2009; 146:155-65.)

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