Nitrite circumvents platelet resistance to nitric oxide in patients with heart failure preserved ejection fraction and chronic atrial fibrillation
Cardiovascular Research

Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is a pro-thrombotic state. Both platelet and vascular responses to nitric oxide (NO) donors are impaired in HF patients with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) compared with healthy volunteers (HVs) due to scavenging of NO, and possibly also reduced activity of the principal NO sensor, soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), limiting the therapeutic potential of NO donors as anti-aggregatory agents. Previous studies have shown that nitrite inhibits platelet activation presumptively after its reduction to NO, but the mechanism(s) involved remain poorly characterized. Our aim was to compare the effects of nitrite on platelet function in HV vs. HF patients with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and chronic atrial fibrillation (HFpEF–AF), vs. patients with chronic AF without HF, and to assess whether these effects occur independent of the interaction with other formed elements of blood.
Platelet responses to nitrite and the NO donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP) were compared in age-matched HV controls (
We here show for the first time that HFpEF-AF (but not chronic AF without HF) is associated with marked impairment of platelet NO responses due to sGC dysfunction and nitrite circumvents the ‘platelet NO resistance’ phenomenon in human HFpEF, at least partly, by acting as a direct sGC activator independent of NO.
Contributors

Alessandra Borgognone
Author

Eduard Shantsila
Author

Sophie M Worrall
Author

Eakkapote Prompunt
Author

Thomas Loka
Author

Brodie L Loudon
Author

Myriam Chimen
Author

G Ed Rainger
Author

Janet M Lord
Author

Ashley Turner
Author

Peter Nightingale
Author

Martin Feelisch
Author

Paulus Kirchhof
Author

Gregory Y H Lip
Author

Steve P Watson
Author

Michael P Frenneaux
Author

Melanie Madhani
Author
Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences Birmingham , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland
