Abstract

Dietary nitrate lowers blood pressure and improves athletic performance in humans, yet data supporting observations that it may increase cerebral blood flow and improve cognitive performance are mixed. We tested the hypothesis that nitrate and nitrite treatment would improve indicators of learning and cognitive performance in a zebrafish (Danio rerio) model. We utilized targeted and untargeted liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis to examine the extent to which treatment resulted in changes in nitrate or nitrite concentrations in the brain and altered the brain metabolome. Fish were exposed to sodium nitrate (606.9 mg/L), sodium nitrite (19.5 mg/L), or control water for 2-4 weeks and free swim, startle response, and shuttle box assays were performed. Nitrate and nitrite treatment did not change fish weight, length, predator avoidance, or distance and velocity traveled in an unstressed environment. Nitrate- and nitrite-treated fish initially experienced more negative reinforcement and increased time to decision in the shuttle box assay, which is consistent with a decrease in associative learning or executive function however, over multiple trials, all treatment groups demonstrated behaviors associated with learning. Nitrate and nitrite treatment was associated with mild anxiogenic-like behavior but did not alter epinephrine, norepinephrine or dopamine levels. Targeted metabolomics analysis revealed no significant increase in brain nitrate or nitrite concentrations with treatment. Untargeted metabolomics analysis found 47 metabolites whose abundance was significantly altered in the brain with nitrate and nitrite treatment. Overall, the depletion in brain metabolites is plausibly associated with the regulation of neuronal activity including statistically significant reductions in the inhibitory neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA; 18-19%), and its precursor, glutamine (17-22%). Nitrate treatment caused significant depletion in the brain concentration of fatty acids including linoleic acid (LA) by 50% and arachidonic acid (ARA) by 80%; nitrite treatment caused depletion of LA by ~90% and ARA by 60%, change which could alter the function of dopaminergic neurons and affect behavior. Nitrate and nitrite treatment did not adversely affect multiple parameters of zebrafish health. It is plausible that indirect NO-mediated mechanisms may be responsible for the nitrate and nitrite-mediated effects on the brain metabolome and behavior in zebrafish.

Highlights

  • Nitrate (NO3-), a component of leafy green and root vegetables, including beetroot juice (BRJ) and many green leafy vegetables, has blood pressuring-lowering and ergogenic effects in humans [1]

  • While nitrate and nitrite treatment did not adversely affect multiple parameters of health, these treatments were associated with mild anxiogenic-like behavior and an initial deficit in learning, which was consistent with either decreased executive function or associative learning

  • The mild anxiogenic-like behavior observed in nitrate- or nitrite-treated zebrafish was similar in scale to zebrafish that were not allowed to exercise [43]

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Summary

Introduction

Nitrate (NO3-), a component of leafy green and root vegetables, including beetroot juice (BRJ) and many green leafy vegetables, has blood pressuring-lowering and ergogenic effects in humans [1]. Nitrate supplementation (either as BRJ or sodium nitrate) has demonstrated benefits pertaining to cardiovascular health [2], such as reducing blood pressure, enhancing blood flow, and elevating the driving pressure of O2 in the microcirculation to areas of hypoxia or exercising tissue [3, 4]. These findings are important to cardiovascular medicine and exercise physiology. Other recent studies have found no significant effect of nitrate or nitrite supplementation on cognitive function and this highlights the need for additional studies to clarify the effect of nitrate and nitrite treatment on cognitive function (reviewed in [9, 10])

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