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Physiological recycling of endogenous nitrate by oral bacteria regulates gastric mucus thickness
Institution:1. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden;2. Department of Medical Cell Biology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden;1. EPIUnit – Institute of Public Health, University of Porto, Portugal;2. Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Sciences, University of Porto, Portugal;3. Centre of Mathematics of the University of Porto, Portugal;4. Faculty of Medicine of the University of Porto, Portugal;5. Pulmonology Department, Centro Hospitalar de Vila Nova de Gaia/Espinho, EPE, Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal;6. National Centre for Multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis, Portugal
Abstract:BackgroundInorganic nitrate from exogenous and endogenous sources is accumulated in saliva, reduced to nitrite by oral bacteria and further converted to nitric oxide (NO) and other bioactive nitrogen oxides in the acidic gastric lumen. To further explore the role of oral microbiota in this process we examined the gastric mucus layer in germ free (GF) and conventional mice given different doses of nitrate and nitrite.MethodsMice were given either nitrate (100 mg/kg/d) or nitrite (0.55–11 mg/kg/d) in the drinking water for 7 days, with the lowest nitrite dose resembling the levels provided by swallowing of fasting saliva. The gastric mucus layer was measured in vivo.ResultsGF animals were almost devoid of the firmly adherent mucus layer compared to conventional mice. Dietary nitrate increased the mucus thickness in conventional animals but had no effect in GF mice. In contrast, nitrite at all doses, restored the mucus thickness in GF mice to the same levels as in conventional animals. The nitrite-mediated increase in gastric mucus thickness was not inhibited by the soluble guanylyl cyclase inhibitor ODQ. Mice treated with antibiotics had significantly thinner mucus than controls. Additional studies on mucin gene expression demonstrated down regulation of Muc5ac and Muc6 in germ free mice after nitrite treatment.ConclusionOral bacteria remotely modulate gastric mucus generation via bioactivation of salivary nitrate. In the absence of a dietary nitrate intake, salivary nitrate originates mainly from NO synthase. Thus, oxidized NO from the endothelium and elsewhere is recycled to regulate gastric mucus homeostasis.
Keywords:Nitric oxide  Nitrosothiols  Gut microbiota  Nitrite  Ulcer
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