Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide in Aging Biology: Potential Applications and Many Unknowns.
Shalender BhasinDouglas SealsMarie MigaudNicolas MusiJoseph A BaurPublished in: Endocrine reviews (2023)
Recent research has unveiled an expansive role of NAD+ in cellular energy generation, redox reactions, and as a substrate or co-substrate in signaling pathways that regulate health-span and aging. This review provides a critical appraisal of the clinical pharmacology and the pre-clinical and clinical evidence for therapeutic effects of NAD+ precursors for age-related conditions, with a particular focus on cardiometabolic disorders, and discusses gaps in current knowledge. NAD+ levels decrease throughout life; age-related decline in NAD+ bioavailability has been postulated to be a contributor to many age-related diseases. Raising NAD+ levels in model organisms by administration of NAD+ precursors improves glucose and lipid metabolism; attenuates diet-induced weight-gain, diabetes, diabetic kidney disease, and hepatic steatosis; reduces endothelial dysfunction; protects heart from ischemic injury; improves left ventricular function in models of heart failure; attenuates cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative disorders; and increases health-span. Early human studies show that NAD+ levels can be raised safely in blood and some tissues by oral NAD+ precursors and suggest benefit in preventing nonmelanotic skin cancer, modestly reducing blood pressure and improving lipid profile in older adults with obesity or overweight; preventing kidney injury in at-risk patients; and suppressing inflammation in Parkinson's disease and SARS-CoV-2 infection. Clinical pharmacology, metabolism, and therapeutic mechanisms of NAD+ precursors remain incompletely understood. We suggest that these early findings provide the rationale for adequately-powered randomized trials to evaluate the efficacy of NAD+ augmentation as a therapeutic strategy to prevent and treat metabolic disorders and age-related conditions.
Keyphrases
- weight gain
- heart failure
- left ventricular
- blood pressure
- healthcare
- type diabetes
- public health
- weight loss
- body mass index
- signaling pathway
- physical activity
- gene expression
- clinical trial
- oxidative stress
- mental health
- cardiovascular disease
- endothelial cells
- metabolic syndrome
- atrial fibrillation
- acute myocardial infarction
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- social media
- aortic stenosis
- health information
- multidrug resistant
- human health
- skin cancer
- prognostic factors
- left atrial
- climate change
- adipose tissue
- birth weight
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- preterm birth
- health promotion