Reduced nitric oxide bioavailability impairs myocardial oxygen balance during exercise in swine with multiple risk factors

Jens van de Wouw, Oana Sorop, Ruben W.A. van Drie, Jaap A. Joles, A. H.Jan Danser, Marianne C. Verhaar, Daphne Merkus, Dirk J. Duncker*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that multiple risk factors, including diabetes mellitus (DM), dyslipidaemia and chronic kidney disease (CKD) result in a loss of nitric oxide (NO) signalling, thereby contributing to coronary microvascular dysfunction. Risk factors were induced in 12 female swine by intravenous streptozotocin injections (DM), a high fat diet (HFD) and renal artery embolization (CKD). Female healthy swine (n = 13) on normal diet served as controls (Normal). After 5 months, swine were chronically instrumented and studied at rest and during exercise. DM + HFD + CKD swine demonstrated significant hyperglycaemia, dyslipidaemia and impaired kidney function compared to Normal swine. These risk factors were accompanied by coronary microvascular endothelial dysfunction both in vivo and in isolated small arteries, due to a reduced NO bioavailability, associated with perturbations in myocardial oxygen balance at rest and during exercise. NO synthase inhibition caused coronary microvascular constriction in exercising Normal swine, but had no effect in DM + HFD + CKD animals, while inhibition of phosphodiesterase 5 produced similar vasodilator responses in both groups, indicating that loss of NO bioavailability was principally responsible for the observed coronary microvascular dysfunction. This was associated with an increase in myocardial 8-isoprostane levels and a decrease in antioxidant capacity, while antioxidants restored the vasodilation to bradykinin in isolated coronary small arteries, suggesting that oxidative stress was principally responsible for the reduced NO bioavailability. In conclusion, five months of combined exposure to DM + HFD + CKD produces coronary endothelial dysfunction due to impaired NO bioavailability, resulting in impaired myocardial perfusion at rest and during exercise.

Original languageEnglish
Article number50
JournalBasic Research in Cardiology
Volume116
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Aug 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was supported by grants from the European Commission FP7-Health-2010 Grant MEDIA-261409 (to DM and DJD), the German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK; 81Z0600207 to DM), and the Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative: an initiative with support of the Dutch Heart Foundation [CVON2014-11 (RECONNECT) to JJ, MCV, DM and DJD].

Funding Information:
The authors thank Annemarie Verzijl, Esther van de Kamp, Ilona Krabbendam and Lau Blonden (ErasmusMC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands) for their expert technical support.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).

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