Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/5851
Title: Red wine-dependent reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide in the stomach
Authors: Gago, Bruno 
Lundberg, Jon O. 
Barbosa, Rui M. 
Laranjinha, João 
Keywords: Red wine; Nitrite; Nitric oxide; Phenolic compounds; Stomach; Free radicals
Issue Date: 2007
Citation: Free Radical Biology and Medicine. 43:9 (2007) 1233-1242
Abstract: Nitrite may be a source for nitric oxide (NO), particularly in highly acidic environments, such as the stomach. Diet products contribute also with reductants that dramatically increase the production of NO from nitrite. Red wine has been attributed health promoting properties largely on basis of the reductive antioxidant properties of its polyphenolic fraction. We show in vitro that wine, wine anthocyanin fraction and wine catechol (caffeic acid) dose- and pH-dependently promote the formation of NO when mixed with nitrite, as measured electrochemically. The production of NO promoted by wine from nitrite was substantiated in vivo in healthy volunteers by measuring NO in the air expelled from the stomach, following consumption of wine, as measured by chemiluminescence. Mechanistically, the reaction involves the univalent reduction of nitrite, as suggested by the formation of NO and by the appearance of EPR spectra assigned to wine phenolic radicals. Ascorbic and caffeic acids cooperate in the reduction of nitrite to NO. Moreover, reduction of nitrite is critically dependent on the phenolic structure and nitro-derivatives of phenols are also formed, as suggested by caffeic acid UV spectral modifications. The reduction of nitrite may reveal previously unrecognized physiologic effects of red wine in connection with NO bioactivity.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/5851
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2007.07.018
Rights: openAccess
Appears in Collections:FFUC- Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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