A salivary component, nitrate, is reduced to nitrite in the oral cavity. Polyphenols in foods are mixed with nitrite in the saliva to be swallowed into the stomach. An objective of the present study is to elucidate reactions between a polyphenol quercetin and a nitrite under acidic conditions. Nitric oxide, which is formed by the reactions between nitrous acid and quercetin or ascorbic acid (AA), can be measured using an oxygen electrode in the saliva as well as a buffer solution. The initial oxidation of quercetin was inhibited by AA, and quercetin enhanced the oxidation of AA, suggesting AA-dependent reduction of quercetin radicals, which might be formed during the oxidation of quercetin by nitrous acid. On the basis of the above results, the usefulness of an oxygen electrode for the measurement of nitrite-dependent nitric oxide formation under acidic conditions is proposed and the possible mechanism of reduction of nitrous acid by quercetin and the interaction between quercetin and AA, which is a normal component in the gastric juice, for the reduction of nitrous acid is discussed.
Human saliva, which contains nitrite, is normally mixed with gastric juice, which contains ascorbic acid (AA). When saliva was mixed with an acidic bu¡er in the presence of 0.1 mM AA, rapid nitric oxide formation and oxygen uptake were observed. The oxygen uptake was due to the oxidation of nitric oxide, which was formed by AA-dependent reduction of nitrite under acidic conditions, by molecular oxygen. A salivary component SCN 3 enhanced the nitric oxide formation and oxygen uptake by the AA/nitrite system. The oxygen uptake by the AA/nitrite/SCN 3 system was also observed in an acidic bu¡er solution. These results suggest that oxygen is normally taken up in the stomach when saliva and gastric juice are mixed. ß
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