to the editor: A recent article by Clanton (1) highlights an insightful Viewpoint regarding the emerging role of myoglobin (Mb) as an interstitial Po2 () regulator during exercise by switching from a nitric oxide (NO) consumer to an NO producer. We propose a point of contention that the now well-known role of NO in regulating during exercise may include mechanisms independent of the mitochondrial “power grid.” The reduction of nitrite to NO during periods of low- by deoxyMb has been increasingly discussed over the past decade in the context of inorganic nitrate supplementation. Indeed, dietary supplementation of inorganic nitrate (e.g., beetroot juice) increases circulating NO bioavailability through serial reduction facilitated by deoxyMb (4). Here, NO boosts cGMP within arteriolar vascular smooth muscle increasing local . Recent works supporting this notion demonstrated that 8 weeks of inorganic nitrate supplementation improved blood flow and vasodilation (i.e., O2 delivery) during exercise in patients with peripheral artery disease (3). A second mechanism by which inorganic nitrate supplementation increases may include suppressing α-mediated vasoconstriction during exercise (functional sympatholysis) (2). Previous works by Nelson and colleagues (5) demonstrated a single dose of inorganic nitrate can improve functional muscle oxygenation in patients with ischemia by blunting sympathetic vasoconstriction. Collectively, regulating during exercise may not rest solely on the shoulders of mitochondria, especially in clinical populations. Thus, the role of Mb in regulating via NO during exercise may not be exclusive to skeletal muscle mitochondria and it could be time to think beyond the “grid.”
REFERENCES
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