Abstract

Arterial hypertension is a major risk factor that can lead to complication of peripheral vascular disease due, in part, to endothelial dysfunction. Because sodium nitrite (SN) can be converted to nitric oxide (NO), which counteracts endothelial dysfunction, we explored the effect of nitrite on neovascularization following hind limb ischemia in different models of hypertension (HT). Chronic delivery of angiotensin II (Ang II, 400ng/kg/min) or N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester (L-NAME, 0.1g/L) was used for a 2-week period to induce hypertension. Mice were subjected to femoral artery ligation-induced ischemia in the hind limb followed by treatment with SN (50mg/L) for 2weeks. SN significantly reduced systolic arterial blood pressure in mice receiving Ang II and L-NAME but had no effect in sham animals. After 2weeks, blood flow and microangiography showed 60% ± 1.0 recovery in sham compared with 40% ± 1.3 in HT mice. Importantly, sham and HT mice treated with SN showed a 100% blood flow recovery associated with normalization in capillary density. The inhibition of xanthine-oxido-reductase (allopurinol) or VEGFR (SU-5416) prevented the neovascularization in HT mice treated with SN. Cyclic GMP (cGMP) content in the hind limb was significantly increased in mice treated with SN compared with non-treated mice. Nitrite/nitrate content was only increased in the sham group treated with SN. Immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis revealed an increase in eNOS/Akt/VEGFR phosphorylation in skeletal muscle from mice treated with SN compared with non-treated mice. Our findings indicate that SN therapy rescues the neovascularization and blood flow recovery in the ischemic hind limb of sham and HT mice likely through the Akt/NO/cGMP and VEGFR pathways.

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